Midsomer Murders (1997) s10e03 Episode Script
King's Crystal
There's absolutely no doubt at all, it's perfectly in order to - this one, too - fund it through a second bank.
Thank you.
Don't we have to be nearby? Leave that to me.
Also, how do you feel about these two? What do you think about that? PHONE RINGS Charles King.
It's Hilary.
Hilary, my dear.
How are you? Fine.
Alan, it's Hilary.
Thank you.
Darling.
You have news? Yes.
The Arts Council grant's been approved.
The theatre can re-open.
Brilliant! Yes, wonderful.
Ian's down from Cambridge.
Well done, Dad! I'll pick you up at Heathrow tomorrow.
Can't wait to see you.
How's it been out there? Charles and Peter Baxter have done all the business.
I've just been a tourist.
I'm letting them get on with it.
I'll tell you about it tomorrow.
Safe journey! Bye! Well, we've saved the theatre! Good.
Let's hope we've saved the business as well.
SCREECH OF TYRES END-OF-SHIFT SIREN BLOWS Look at this, then! What's that? I don't believe it! Come on! Jack, take a look at this! Jack! What? Boys, come and have a look at this! What the hell's that? Wouldn't you just know it? HORN BLARES HORN BLASTS ANGRILY What's all this, then, Mr King? I don't like your tone, Tewson.
No more than I like yours, Baxter.
We're trying to raise capital to save your jobs.
Alan King would never have done this.
He's not even in his grave yet.
I think I know what my brother's wishes were, Jack.
I'll see you at the funeral, I hope.
Oh, you will! POUNDS HORN (WORKER) Go on! Get lost! Are you family? A friend of Ian's, Alan King's son.
Where's Ian? I don't know.
Now, bride and groom, best man Peter, on my right.
Have you seen Ian? He's round the back, mooning about with his nancy boyfriend.
Dad! What?! Ignore him, Hilary.
Now, everyone this way! Say, "One, two, three!" You're wanted.
Sorry.
I'm not grinning in some cheesy photograph.
Give it a rest, Ian.
Dead just six months and she's coupling up with his brother! It's disgusting! That is so unfair.
Is this fair? To my father? Does she care? Hilary was devastated when your father died.
If you'd stayed around, you'd have known.
She wanted me out of the way, back at university.
Charles supported her through it all, Ian.
He was here for her.
He loves her.
That's fine, then (!) Let's all move on.
Here's to the happy couple! She's entitled to her happiness! But she needs you.
Please don't push her away.
You're pushing everyone away, Ian.
People are leaving.
Ian, is this what your dad would really want? No, my father He'd most likely say, "Good luck, Hils.
Go for it.
Make your fun happen.
" So? How can we put a smile on your face? By not going to this bloody reception.
OK, so we give it a miss.
Come on, let's get hammered.
Get down the club.
This is Midsomer.
There's only Cawston.
"Only"? Nowhere better! Every hour is happy hour in Cawston! Beautiful dress, Soph.
Oh, thanks! You haven't forgotten Tuesday? Oh.
I can't make it.
I'm sorry.
We'll do it another time, OK? Sorry! Everybody! Ready? I've got to say, she's very fit! And she knows it.
How embarrassing! Don't tell me you fancy her? Wrong gender, love.
But she definitely fancies you! This I do not believe! How dare you come here? Just making a point.
Today of all days! We're not going anywhere, Baxter.
We're not gonna sit at home like dumbbells! Clear off, all of you.
Go on, clear off! Not until you see us right! Get off! ANGRY SHOUTING Just go! You will pay for this! DISGRUNTLED MURMURINGS What's this about the pensions money? Vanished.
Like snow off a roof.
Slipped quietly into your family's pockets.
I promise I know nothing about this.
You're going to hear about it loud and long.
In the meantime, go and swill your champagne.
And remember, we bought it for you! Ian.
Come on.
HORN BLARES, PROTESTORS SHOUT All three Gifford brothers stood in the dock smirking.
And? Judge Lloyd starts.
Ten years, twelve years, ten.
A great result.
Yes! Yes! Ow! All right, sir? Paper cut? Oh, dear! Oh, it's from Cully.
She's playing at the old open-air theatre, you know.
They've just re-opened it and this is their first production.
Would you stick that up on the notice board? I find Shakespeare a bit hard-going, to be honest, sir.
A bit of a snore.
Yeah, well, four hours on a stone seat in the open air is hard going.
Four hours?! Unfortunately, Jones, brevity was never the soul of Shakespeare's wit.
Yeah! Sentences longer than Judge Lloyd's! Oh, perfect! Just the right shade.
How much do I owe you? Don't be silly! Hi, Soph! Would you join us for lunch? Ian's working down in the water meadows.
No, thanks.
Give him my love.
I will.
And his to you, I'm sure.
Ciao! Did you see Ian while I was away? No.
He's not returning my calls.
It's like there was never anything between us.
No, I can't reach him, either.
I think it may be He's still grieving for his father's death.
And my marriage.
He's so angry with me, Sophie.
So angry.
Here in the worshipful lodge of the vale of Midsomer, I hereby do most solemnly promise and swear that I will always hail the secret arts' heart.
The master's rehearsing the third degree and cannot be interrupted.
Don't be ridiculous! You cannot enter the temple in a state of undress! Out of my way! Murder and treason KERFUFFLE Sorry, Worshipful Master! Charles, we need to speak.
Could you wait without, please, James? Tewson has been pouring poison into the receivers' ears.
They're querying the accounts.
It's a receiver's job.
Routine, Peter, that's all.
Charlie, if those figures come unwrapped, we are liable! You're the accountant! If this is you wriggling, forget it.
You signed the accounts.
They're asking some very difficult questions.
I'm sure we'll find the answers, as long as you don't panic.
I'll sort out Tewson.
Now, go home and get a grip! Cully, love! Give me that.
Thanks.
What have you got in here? Costumes for the play.
Can't somebody do that for you? Wardrobe people? It's not a West End job, Dad! It's 200 quid a week and wash your own frocks! We're actors.
We do it for love.
Certainly not for the money! For sale? He wasn't bluffing, then.
Doesn't look like it.
You can't do this, Dad! I go away for a couple It's my house.
I'll sell it when I see fit! I'm not moving! What happened? Who did this? Who do you think did it? The mob from the factory, I expect.
I'm not staying here to get any more windows smashed.
I've had enough.
And me, what am I supposed to do? Grow up and look after yourself for a change! Soph, are you all right? I'm fine, James.
Thanks for the lift.
OK.
You are not welcome here, either.
CREAKING What are you doing here? HORN BLARES Idiot! About five minutes ago.
Lying in the stream.
Yes, I do.
His name is Baxter.
Peter Baxter.
He's down there.
Seen anything? No.
Tom! The lungs are full of water, but it's not a straightforward drowning.
Was he held under? There's a stab wound, entry between the sixth and seventh rib.
It's collapsed the lung and left a sucking wound that's drawn in water.
Weapon? Nothing so far.
Time of death? Sometime last night.
I'll know better later, hopefully.
Thank you.
The victim's name is Peter Baxter.
That's his car.
So he came here to meet someone.
Yeah.
Or brought someone down here, maybe.
He lives nearby, according to Mrs King.
She found him.
I see her.
Right.
You carry on here.
Sir.
Mrs King? I'm Chief Inspector Barnaby from Cawston CID.
I've given my statement to this young woman.
I'd like to go home now.
Yes, of course.
I was just wondering how well did you know Mr Baxter? Peter was chief accountant at my husband's firm, King's Crystal.
Look, I was collecting flowers this morning and there he was in the stream.
He's got a daughter, Sophie.
I'd like to be the one to tell her what's happened.
That's all right.
We'll handle that.
Right.
OK, thank you.
That's it.
You can go now.
But would you mind leaving that knife with me, please? As long as I get it back.
Thinking of buying, sir? Not without robbing a bank.
Can I help you? Miss Baxter? Miss Sophie Baxter? Yes.
I'm Detective Chief Inspector Barnaby.
This is DS Jones, from Cawston CID.
May we come in? Sorry about the mess.
Miss Baxter I'm very sorry to have to tell you that Mr Baxter, your father, was found dead this morning.
We're also treating it as a murder.
Miss Baxter, when did you last see your father? Umyesterday.
Here.
We had an awful row.
It was about the house.
About selling the house? Yes.
I suppose he's just pushed someone too far.
Any idea who? No.
I know there's been business worries.
To do with King's Crystal? I remember there was a lot of bad press about its closure.
When I tried to talk to him, he just said I was spoiling his drink.
So he'd made enemies? My father didn't know how to make friends.
KNOCKING Sorry, Soph.
Oh, James! These are the police.
I just heard.
Come on.
Well, we'll leave you two to talk.
Mr? Taylor.
James Taylor.
SHE SOBS I'm not sorry he's dead.
Don't say such things, Ian.
Why are you being so hateful to everyone? Am I? It's about me and Charles, isn't it? I know it's difficult, but can't you just respect Respect? I loved your father as much as you did, Ian.
Alan was You hardly had time to change the sheets before you were screwing his brother! Ian! Keep a civil tongue in your head! Since when do you give me orders? Stop it, Ian.
Don't Don't what? You married him.
I didn't.
Ian! Detective Chief Inspector Barnaby.
Charles King.
How do you do? Detective Sergeant Jones.
How do you do? Dreadful news about Peter.
Shall we go inside? Was he in any way responsible for the company's bankruptcy? The firm was past its sell-by date.
We're starting afresh in Shanghai.
King's Crystal is going to be made in China? In 20 years' time, everything will be.
One has to move with the times.
Can I get you a drink? No.
No, thank you.
Mr King, we suspect that Mr Baxter was murdered.
Murdered?! By whom? I understand he made enemies when King's Crystal was closed down.
We did receive threats, yes.
Were they verbal? Letters? What were they? They were demonstrations.
Demonstrations - you mean workers at the factory? Yes, a chap called Tewson was the ringleader.
Jack Tewson.
Peter wouldn't go out of his way to be popular, but he was fair and on the square with everybody.
I lost a friend and a brilliant accountant.
Alan King - that would be Charles King's elder brother.
He owned half of King's Crystal with Charles.
Alan was always a sleeping partner.
"Teacher of drama.
" Would that be at Cawston comprehensive? I believe so.
Yes, I remember him.
A lovely man.
It was he who first introduced Cully to the stage.
This stone will be laid at the theatre.
He raised most of the money to reopen it.
Charles King and Peter Baxter were in some money trouble over King's Crystal.
That right? There's been talk, yes.
Mr Taylor, were you there when the big row erupted between Sophie and her father yesterday? Yes, I drove her home.
She got upset about him selling the house.
Are you and Sophie close? Used to be, yes.
Baxter put the blocks on it.
He wanted to match her with Ian King, her class of person.
He thought I was chasing a meal ticket.
Accountants! Money's all they see in everything.
They're saying round the village he drowned, right? No, he was stabbed.
Stabbed? Now, I get it! You're wasting your time looking at me.
Right, George.
That's good.
Are they still searching? Right.
Thank you.
That's Bullard.
The murder weapon was a sharp implement eight inches long.
Still no sign of it.
Charles King, sir.
He's Mr Clean.
Not even a speeding ticket.
Director of several companies.
Spotless credit check.
He's divorced and recently remarried.
And he's a Mason.
Ah.
You spotted the handshake? Yes, I did.
I think I should tell you I was once a member of the Masons.
Were you? Yes, sir, Cawston Lodge.
Thought it might help with my promotion.
You never know.
Policemen, Masons.
There's always the perception of divided loyalty.
But your Masonic membership may come in useful on this one.
If it takes us there, fine by me.
I've invited Sophie for dinner.
She shouldn't be on her own after what's happened.
That'll be nice.
Maybe you'd like to join us.
No, thanks.
Dave and I are busy.
Ian, please! I can't take much more of you being like this.
How would you like me to be? I'd like my son back.
That's what I want.
Do you hate me so much? Don't take it to heart, Hilary.
Will you be staying much longer? For as long as Ian wants me to.
If that's all right.
This is ã2,000.
Or we can do something simple for 500.
It only goes up in flames, anyway.
Whatever.
You take care of it.
And what about you, Soph? Will you let me take care of you? Oh, James.
Now he's gone, there's nothing standing between us.
I love you.
You know that.
James, please don't.
Not here.
Not now! Please don't.
It's Ian, isn't it? You're still burning a candle for him.
Is Ian on your doorstep asking you what you need? Is he the one taking care of you? No.
I am.
James, I appreciate everything you've done.
It's just I'm sorry.
It's amazing, that.
I bought my gran a piece of King's Crystal for her ruby wedding.
She's still got it.
I thought this place had been closed down.
It has.
We're just completing an order for the receivers.
Oh, listen to that.
Dead silence.
Full of machines, once.
Making stained glass, art glass.
Blowing shops all along the back.
Near to 100 worked here.
Craftsmen and women.
All gone now.
I suppose you're here about Baxter.
Come with me.
There's something you ought to see.
I can't pretend I was too sorry to hear about Baxter.
Did you threaten him, Mr Tewson? We had words from time to time.
This is Baxter's office.
This is normally kept locked but we were broken into last night.
Seems they were looking for something.
Looking for something? Looking for what, Mr Tewson? I don't know.
Evidence, perhaps? Money's disappeared.
Our redundancy pay, our pensions.
Where were you last night? I was at home, alone, drinking.
I've been doing a lot of that these days.
Got any ideas who might have done this? I don't know.
It could be Alan King's son, Ian.
He inherited part of the company.
But Baxter and his uncle are keeping him in the dark about it.
Perhaps he came to look.
You know Ian well enough to think he might do such a thing? I know he's not a happy boy.
Go on, Mr Tewson.
His mother, the merry widow, married his Uncle Charles.
I know he's very upset about that.
OK.
Thank you, Mr Tewson.
Thank you.
Fine.
I'm doing a PhD in biology.
The insect life of Midsomer's water meadows.
We are investigating the death of Peter Baxter.
I've not seen him for days.
I saw Mr Baxter last night.
I was out posting a letter.
He nearly wiped me up with his car.
What time was this, Mr? Monroe.
David Monroe.
Must have been about elevenish.
Where were you at that time? I'd gone for a walk.
You didn't go to the King's Crystal factory? No.
I've not been there since Dad died.
Your dad left you part of the family business, I understand.
He left me shares, yes.
Were you involved with Mr Baxter and your uncle in the closure of that factory? No.
If my father had been alive, he'd never have allowed it to happen.
The rot set in after he died.
What do you mean, "the rot"? You mean corrupt practice on the part of Charles King and Peter Baxter? Those two were as close as the fingers on your hand.
Not a scrap of conscience between them.
And your mother, Hilary? What was her involvement with the company? Who knows? All my life I thought I knew my mother.
Whoever she is, she hides it well.
Hides what? I thought she loved my father.
And then she goes and Ian So you'd met Mr Baxter before, had you? Since you recognised him last night.
Yes, a few times.
Nasty puffball of a man.
He used to call me "the nancy-boy".
I'm sorry he died how he did, but Well, maybe the gods are happy.
MOBILE RINGS Yeah? Ah! Good.
Be there in a couple of minutes.
They've found the murder weapon.
Sir! Tom! That's an ornamental dagger of some sort.
It's a Masonic ceremonial dagger.
Is it? Yeah.
See the symbol there? Set square and compass.
What's these letters? J-O-B.
J-O-B.
Someone's initials and a date? Possibly.
How many of your father's books do you want to keep? Secrets of Ancient China? Oxfam.
My father's Masonic regalia.
Ah.
One of the secret squirrels, was he? It fits the entry wound and there's a DNA match to Baxter.
There's a piece missing from the tip of the blade.
Fresh break.
The knife may have hit a rib, but the fragment's not turned up.
Anything else? Hilary King's pruning knife.
Clean.
No connection.
So that's it from me.
Thank you, George.
Thank you.
Fraud Squad says King's Crystal looks a bit iffy.
Several paper companies shuffling money about.
Any sign of Baxter's cap yet? No, sir, we're still looking.
J-O-B.
Peter Baxter was an accountant, wasn't he? He could have been a Mason.
But these are not his initials.
So maybe he was stabbed by another member of the brotherhood.
I've got it! Sorry, sir! J-O-B.
It stands for Jahweh Osiris Baal.
They're the ineffable trinity of Masonic gods.
Are they? Yes.
So these are not the initials of a particular member? No.
But Charles King is certainly one of the cloth, isn't he? Maybe he found out Baxter had his fingers in the till.
Could well be.
Want me to do some digging, sir? Yes, I do.
The Masons may not be a secret society but they are certainly a society with secrets.
There's a Sergeant Jones to see you.
Show him in.
Good afternoon.
Sorry to disturb you, Mr King, but I think you may be able to help me if we can speak on the square.
Can I show you this? We believe it was used to kill Mr Baxter.
Ever seen it before? I have seen many like it.
It's a poignard, a replica of our ceremonial dagger.
Every apprentice in the Midsomer Lodges receives one on being entered.
As you'll be aware.
Yes, but I've never seen one with a date stamped on it before.
Here.
16th of the 12th 02.
No, our lodge uses a simple code.
The numbers are letters of the alphabet.
P.
L.
B.
Peter Leonard Baxter.
This was Peter's.
So where would he have kept this? He was a little cavalier about matters Masonic.
Often it would be in his briefcase.
He used it sometimes in his office as a paper knife.
Thank you.
It's been very helpful.
And you're a little rusty about matters Masonic.
Our lodge meeting is the second Thursday of the month.
Visitors always welcome.
Thanks.
Better get my apron ironed! Hello, Ian.
Looking for me? No, no.
Just out for a walk.
Is Cully Barnaby your daughter? The actress playing Ophelia? Yes, she is.
It was your father raised the money to re-open the theatre, wasn't it? One of my dad's dreams.
After he died, I wanted to see the project through.
I thought you were a biologist? I am.
But since I found myself standing in for my father, I took advantage of the situation.
I chose Hamlet as the first production.
For my mother.
Her favourite? No, I just thought it would do her good to see it.
Must go.
I've got some business to do.
Bye.
There's rue for you.
And here's some for me.
You must wear your rue with a difference.
There's a daisy.
I would give you some violets, but they withered all when my father died.
They say he made a good end.
OK, thank you, Cully, love.
Hold it there.
Take a break, everybody.
Next call, Hamlet! Cully.
Yes? Delicious.
Very nice.
But a bit too winsome, perhaps.
Forget the acting.
Just a bit more unstable.
OK.
Right, Hamlet.
We'll have another go at To Be Or Not To Be.
And listen.
The man is 28 years old, not 16.
So less hormonal and much more metaphysical.
He's a hard man to please.
The man couldn't direct traffic! The wound shows an angle of entry something like that.
So Baxter could have killed himself.
And then dropped it in the stream? It's possible.
What about the missing fragment from the blade? It's definitely not in the body.
This is not adding up, is it? Baxter left no note.
He was selling his house.
He was moving on, not killing himself.
And there were no prints on that dagger.
He was wearing driving gloves.
Yes, but he used it as a paper knife.
So the handle was obviously wiped clean.
Of course.
Baxter was murdered.
Jones, I want you to take up Charles King's invitation to his lodge.
Sir.
Keep an eye on him and see who else has taken vows at the Vale of Midsomer Chapter.
It's a hanging offence to betray the Brothers' secrets, sir.
Got a problem with that? No.
I'll survive.
I hope! ECHOING VOICES: 'Come on! Lift it! 'A batch of 15.
'Keep a look out.
'I need two more.
' What's this about? I was just remembering how it was when I was a kid.
It's gone, Ian.
We can't change yesterday.
No.
I wanted to say to you, Charles, I know I've been a top-class pain in the past few months.
You certainly have.
I wanted to apologise.
I was very close to my father.
I loved him too, Ian.
I felt angry that all this had come to nothing.
No, it hasn't.
We're finished here, but we'll be expanding abroad.
I can show you the plans.
I'm not a businessman.
Nor was Alan, but when we were in China he could see for himself.
He understood why we had to make the change.
And I'm sure his best wish would be that you could be as passionate about the future as he was.
Maybe we should talk about it.
I'd prefer that to the verbal battering I've been getting.
Sorry.
I have to say I've been worried about you.
My head's been in a bell for God knows how long.
This is all very sudden.
What's happened? I don't know.
I woke up this morning and something had lifted.
I felt released.
Ian, I have no heir.
No son.
I'd like nothing better than that you and I should be family.
I'd like that too.
It's what Dad would have wanted.
Ah! Hello, what have we here? Off to stick up some play bills.
Are you? Now, Joyce, you do know that strictly speaking, fly-posting is illegal.
Oh, have a day off, Dad! We've got to publicise the show.
Did you stick up the one I sent to the station? Yes, but that was in the police canteen.
Good.
Here, take a few more.
Put them up in some of your regular watering holes.
Cully, Joyce, I really do think Tom, it's hardly the crime of the century.
Well, on your own heads be it.
Oh! Scary! WATERFOWL QUACK KEYPAD BLEEPS MOBILE RINGS David? Where's lunch? Bye! Hey! GUNSHOT Let go! Let go! What's happening? He was aiming at you.
Rot! I was after rabbits! That's not how it looked to me! Give him his gun, David! Give me the gun.
It's Jack, isn't it? Jack Tewson.
That's right.
We met outside the church.
At the wedding.
I remember seeing you blowing glass.
As a kid, when my father brought me round the factory.
Fantastic! Yeah? I worked for 30 years for your family.
A lifetime's apprenticeship.
Then they walked off and left me potless.
Believe me, "fantastic" is not the word.
The company's gone bust, friend.
It happens.
So does fraud, embezzlement, thieving.
Not my father.
We all thought that.
But I bet he's left you your share, hasn't he? He might have been hunting rabbits, but he had you in his sights.
He had been drinking.
Maybe he was tempted.
Maybe he has reason if the company ripped him off.
Whatever, you're not responsible.
Neither was my father.
Craftsmen like Tewson were his people.
He admired them.
He felt responsible for them.
And so do I.
Our Masonic temple is fashioned of living souls.
And each entered apprentice shall wear this apron.
This is his body of mortality, his veil of flesh and blood clothing his inner soul.
His badge of innocence and purity given to all by the great architect of the universe.
This apron shall he wear as we wear these, our gloves of white, for we have each washed our hands in innocence.
THREE LOUD KNOCKS Who seeks entrance? A poor candidate in a state of darkness, hoodwinked and slipshod, seeks entrance.
Let him be entered.
I receive you at point of knife pressed to your naked breast to teach you, as this is a torture to your flesh, so would it be to your conscience if you ever fail to keep a brother Mason's secrets inviolable.
You will pledge ever to conceal never to reveal all secrets - murder and treason excepted.
I knew them when they were lads.
Worked for me here in their school holidays.
Chalk and cheese.
How's that? Charles had a business head on him even then.
Practical.
Alan was on another planet.
Oh, look who's here! It's you, is it, eh? Finally found your way down here, have you? Mr Tewson, please! That Baxter was a thief.
If you shook hands with him, you had to count your fingers.
I wasn't upset when I heard what had happened.
Change the record, Tewson.
That mate of yours, Ian.
He's probably had his cut already.
They're all the same.
They all piss in the same pot.
Good evening, Mr Tewson.
Oh, it's God's detective.
Who killed Baxter? Solved it yet, Sherlock? Let's have you, Jack.
Finish up.
I've finished.
I did my last day's work today.
I'm now on the dole.
On the old jam roll.
Well, roll yourself home.
Are you any further on, Mr Barnaby? David, these things take a little time, you know.
I take it you've met Mr Tewson before.
With a rifle, yes.
He was taking a pot-shot at Ian.
A pot-shot? Where was this? Above the water meadows.
Ian was working there.
Tewson claimed he was shooting at rabbits.
I'm not so sure.
To complete the business in hand, to our fellow Mason, newly entered as apprentice to this lodge, let the blessing of light be restored.
Congratulations.
(JONES) 'Guess who the new initiate was.
Ian King.
' Ian King has joined the lodge? Ian King? He seemed very keen to ingratiate himself with his stepfather.
I think he's got ambitions.
Maybe Baxter got in his way.
Hey.
Update from the Fraud Squad.
Apparently, our Mr Baxter was a very creative accountant.
See page three.
Uniform had something on him too, sir.
He reported a brick through his window the day before he died.
My guess is Jack Tewson and Rentamob from the factory.
Yeah.
Baxter's solicitor tells me he's left a very substantial estate with sums as yet undisclosed in offshore accounts.
Oh, James Taylor was there last night too, so he's a member.
Think he could have killed Baxter? So Sophie could get the money? It's possible, isn't it? Maybe he thought if he got rid of Baxter they could all live happily ever after.
Hilary? Hilary? Oh, God, Ian! Oh, you made my heart skip! Let me listen.
Let me hear it.
Ian, stop it.
Don't be silly! Silly? I'm sorry.
Maybe it's Midsomer Madness! May I be philosophical with you for a moment? I've concluded that life is an effort that deserves a better course.
Sorry? I'm ditching my PhD.
Big left turn.
Bye-bye Biology.
Why? What for? Money! What everyone wants.
Are you mocking me? No, it's true.
Ask who wants to be a millionaire, and half the world phones up.
You're pissed! I swear I'm stone cold sober.
I remember you, Sophie.
Fresh and bright-eyed.
I remember you, too, Ian.
Tell me.
Was it lust at first sight? Don't suppose you're feeling frisky, are you? You are mocking me! See, no sense of humour.
There are reasons why some people are alone.
James was right! You're a spoilt brat! How dare you make fun of me? Hey! What's going on? I don't care if I never see you again! Ian? I'm just saving her from herself.
You never can tell with women, can you? And if you can, you probably shouldn't, right? What are you playing at? I've joined the Masons.
Why? Like father, like son? I'm getting close to the truth.
About what? You mean Baxter? You know who killed Sophie's father? Yes.
Who? The less you know about it, the better.
I want us to try to sort out our outstanding difficulties.
You want to smooth things over, eh? There were some monies due to your members, Jack.
Peter Baxter did a complete audit shortly before he died.
Sucked more figures out of his thumb, did he? I'm prepared to accept there might be some inequity in the way Peter dealt with the accounts.
You can say that again.
We might be able to find some funds to compensate you.
Perhaps only a percentage - say, ten pence in the pound.
Don't insult us, Mr King! At least have a look at the offer, Jack.
Take it away.
Discuss it.
Before I do, there's something I want you to read.
Where did you get these? Dropped onto my mat, sent anonymously.
They must have been stolen from the office.
If they're stolen, we'd better call the police.
Let me go over these.
Then perhaps we can meet again.
I'll meet you in court.
I'm trying to sort this mess out, Jack.
So am I.
Ian and I met at university two years ago.
We're good friends.
Just good friends? I've nothing to hide.
I'd like it to be more than that, but Ian's not inclined.
You told me that you have some information.
I haven't, but I think Ian has.
He told me he knows who killed Peter Baxter.
Who? He won't give me a name.
I tried, but he stonewalled.
Ian's head's been in bits ever since his father died.
I'm worried he's in danger.
Could you arrange with him to meet on your own? Somewhere quiet, like here? That's another thing.
He says he's given all of this the elbow.
David, wherever he agrees to meet you, let me know.
I'll join you.
Maybe between the two of us we can persuade him to tell us exactly what he does know.
It matches exactly the piece that was missing from the dagger, sir.
Where was it found? At the King's Crystal office that was ransacked.
Forensics found it, jammed in one of the drawer locks.
Charles King said Peter Baxter often used this dagger in his office.
Yeah.
So someone gets in and uses it on the drawer.
Sounds about right, but doesn't tell us who.
No, but it does tell us that whoever ransacked that office was probably also Baxter's killer.
Sophie! Sophie! I don't believe you, Ian! How can you say such a thing? Everything all right? Yes, Charles, just a tiff.
Mother and son thing.
Back in a sec.
I'll give you a hand hanging those up.
I thought things were fine.
He was on great form at the lodge meeting.
What happened? Ian has told me something awful.
About Peter Baxter's death.
He's not here? No, not yet.
I arranged to pick him up.
He didn't show.
I can't find him anywhere.
I'm worried about Sophie, too.
Sophie Baxter? Yes.
Are you? MOBILE RINGS Excuse me.
Barnaby.
Oh.
Um, listen, you stay there.
I'll be with you as soon as I can.
Has he shown up? Yes.
Yes, he has.
Thank God for that.
Where? You'd better come with me.
You first.
You stay there.
Charles King found him hanging from a beam.
He managed to get him down, but according to him, Ian was already dead.
Where's Bullard? On his way.
There's no sign of a struggle, so my first thoughts are suicide.
Could be.
But David Monroe told me he thought Ian was in danger from whoever killed Peter Baxter.
Monroe set up that meeting with you.
Maybe to alibi himself for the time of Ian King's death.
What would be his motive? Unrequited love? He leans that way, doesn't he? But why, why would David Monroe kill Baxter? Pass.
The other thing is the rope.
It's a cable term.
A what? A cable term.
It's used in Masonic ceremonies to lead in initiates.
David Monroe also told me that Sophie has disappeared.
Go round the house and check.
And since Charles King found the body, I'll start with him.
OK? Mr King? My wife is in deep shock.
She's taken a sleeping tablet.
I'll speak to her later.
I've told Sergeant Jones everything I know about what happened.
I feel pretty bloody about this, Barnaby.
Hilary and I realised that Ian was becoming more and more unstable.
I'm not a psychiatrist, but I do know Ian was deeply unhappy.
I told you he was in danger.
I warned you.
There's a killer out there.
I warned you! Police! Sophie! He taught me drama in my sixth form.
He should have been a professional director.
We could have done with him on this.
"Get thee to a nunnery", next.
See what shape that's in, shall we? Cully, how do we get our moody Dane to shape up? He needs encouragement, Harold.
Not just endless put-downs.
I've tried.
It's just not working.
I ask for existential despair and he comes on like a singer in a boy band! And now, to cap it all, Polonius has got laryngitis.
What? Can we get a stand-in? I'm afraid you're looking at him, love.
Oh.
Nothing, yet.
Not a sign.
Left her mobile.
ANSWERPHONE BLEEPS Miss Baxter, you have one message.
'Miss Baxter, Midsomer Dental here.
You missed your appointment yesterday.
Phone to rebook.
' Several missed calls from James Taylor.
You don't think that sack could have been used to carry her, sir? Take Higgins with you.
Bring James Taylor in.
Ask him if he'd like to help us with our enquiries.
Don't take no for an answer.
Thank you.
There we go.
Now, James.
Could you tell us, please, about that black sack you were seen removing from Honey Tree House, yesterday? Sophie asked me to take her father's clothes to the Oxfam.
A witness said it looked heavy.
Yeah.
Clothes and books.
It was heavy.
Where is it now? I left it outside the shop in Cawston last night.
They'll be there.
Unless someone's stole them.
Did Sophie give you no indication where she'd gone? She's got a friend up north somewhere.
Fiona something.
When it comes to trouble with Ian King, I'm not the best shoulder for her to cry on.
She knows my feelings.
What feelings, Mr Taylor? Jealousy? Hostility? She rejected you in favour of him, yes? You could say that, yeah.
Did you make contact with Ian King after she'd gone? No.
I thought this was about Sophie.
James, two people have died.
And Sophie is missing.
I wouldn't harm Sophie for the world! Look, I admit I loathed Baxter and I despised Ian King.
You assisted at Ian's initiation, didn't you? Led him into the temple by the noose.
The kind of noose that hung him.
Neither his blood nor Baxter's is on my conscience.
You may think the craft just a load of rituals, but to me, it's a state of grace.
Built on respect for the living souls of all true brothers.
I think he's telling the truth.
Guilty or not, he gave me the evil eye, sir.
Got a proper Mason's warning off him.
It's Bullard's preliminary report on Ian King.
He'd been heavily sedated.
Barbiturates.
So not a suicide.
We need to talk to Hilary King.
Mrs King.
I'm sorry to disturb you.
Your husband told us you were up here.
One of my husbands, Mr Barnaby.
Yes.
Mrs King .
.
did Ian ever speak to you about who killed Mr Baxter? What do you mean? He spoke to his friend, David Monroe, about it.
He seemed upset.
His father's death hit Ian hard.
They were so alike.
Passionate, sensitive, sometimes a little crazy, both of them.
Did you get the impression Ian was becoming more disturbed, lately? He was very upset about my marriage.
He did all he could to dissuade me.
Perhaps there was some method in his madness.
But recently he'd seemed to accept Charles.
He'd even begun to take an interest in the business.
I can't believe what he's done.
Mrs King, I have to tell you that we suspect Ian's death was not self-inflicted.
In fact, we believe that Ian was murdered.
What?! He'd been heavily sedated some time before he was found.
No! No! Now, Mrs King No! Oh, no! I'm sorry.
I can't believe Oh, God! No! ANGUISHED SOBBING What if Sophie's run, sir? Both killings could be down to her.
She could have stabbed Baxter.
And hoisted him onto that beam? Maybe her with somebody else? Oi! Hang on! Young man! Come here.
Can I see? Where did you find this? In the bushes, over there.
We didn't nick it.
No, you're not in any trouble.
But I think we know who owns this.
I'll hang on to it, if I may.
That's ours! Finders keepers.
Off you go, the pair of you.
David Monroe says he saw Peter Baxter drive past him the night he died.
He recognised him by the car and the cap he was wearing.
Yeah.
So what's it doing here? It could have blown off.
It's an open-topped car.
Thank you, Rupert.
Thank you, sir.
If it had blown off passing the green, then David Monroe couldn't have seen the driver wearing it by the post box half a mile beyond here.
That's true.
What if someone else was wearing the cap to make him look like Baxter? I mean, the knife, the fragment in the drawer lock, what if that night Baxter had disturbed that someone else searching the offices? And he turned the knife on Baxter? Yeah.
So what Monroe actually saw was Baxter's killer driving his car and wearing his cap which he later threw into the bushes.
Then what? He drives to the water meadows.
Baxter's dead by this time, in the back seat, boot, whatever.
He dumps the body, dumps the knife, leaves the car.
So how did the cap end up in the bushes? Well, I'm thinking that he runs away from the car, adrenaline pumping, but as he crosses the green, he realises he's still got the cap on.
So he tosses it into the bushes.
Works for me.
All we need is the "who".
Tell me.
Talk to me.
What is it? Leave me alone.
We've both lost someone we loved.
Oh, how can you say that? How can you compare? He was my only son! Ever since you I think you'd better go.
I want you to know that JUST GO NOW, PLEASE! Hilary Hilary? What's happening? She wants me to leave.
I guess I should.
I'll be back for the funeral.
Stay as long as you wish.
You've been a rock to Ian.
I'm so grateful.
Tom! I've been waiting in the car for ten minutes.
I'm sorry.
We can't be late for Cully's opening night! No.
I was just turning something over in my mind.
Come on.
Come on! Coming! Coming.
THEATRE BELL RINGS New job, eh? Just a bit of cash in hand.
Ian King organised it for me before he That was very decent of him.
I I think I got him wrong.
He is far gone.
Far gone.
Truly in my youth I suffered much extremity for love very much like this.
What do you read, my lord? Words.
Words.
Words.
What is the matter, my lord? Between who? The matter that you read.
Slanders, sir.
Though this be madness, yet there is method in it.
HIS WORDS ECHO IN BARNABY'S HEAD Perhaps there was some method in his madness.
HER WORDS ECHO 'Murder,' though it hath no tongue will speak with most miraculous organ.
I'll have these players play something like the murder of my father HIS WORDS ECHO The play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king.
'The conscience of the king.
' Of the king The king The king.
I say we will have no more marriage! Those that are married already all but one shall live.
The rest shall keep as they are.
Tom! Cully's on.
Oh, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown.
The courtier's, soldier's, scholar's eye, tongue, sword.
The expectancy and rose of the fair state.
Tom! Excuse me.
And the mould of Excuse me! Oh, woe is me to have seen what I have seen.
Where are we going? Belt up and I'll tell you.
Ian King chose Hamlet as the opening production especially for his mother to see.
His mother? Yeah.
Rub her nose in the fact she'd married her husband's brother.
I don't follow, sir.
Hamlet's father was murdered.
And Alan King died on a business trip to China with his brother, Charles.
But that was an accident.
According to the paperwork it was.
But what if Charles killed Alan King, Ian found out about it and Charles had to shut him up? Murdered him? Yeah.
If I'm right, then Hilary King could be in some danger here.
Come on! Come on! David, is Mrs King in? Er, no.
She left about ten minutes ago.
She's taken Charles to hospital.
What happened? He started feeling ill, groggy.
I helped put him in the car.
Is something wrong? Which hospital? I don't know.
Stay here.
If they come back, call me, yes? Sure.
Thank you.
There's no record of Charles being brought to any A&E.
But they've got a trace on his mobile close to Midsomer Magna.
That's the factory - King's Crystal.
Mrs King? Mrs King.
Drop the dagger.
No.
No, Mrs King Please, put the knife down.
Put the knife down.
HE GROANS So Charles began to feel ill.
I'd ground some sleeping tablets into his food.
I persuaded him to go to the hospital.
Instead you took him to the factory.
Yes.
You also took this dagger with you.
Was it your intention to kill Charles? Yes.
Why? Because .
.
he killed my son.
It wasn't you? You didn't sedate Ian in exactly the same way before you killed him? I loved my son.
Charles is your husband.
Yes.
I wish to God I'd My marriage to him made Ian so angry.
So hostile.
It poisoned everything.
Mrs King, your first husband, Alan.
He died during a visit to China, didn't he? His death was accidental - a car crash, yeah? So Charles claimed.
But I'm convinced now Charles killed Alan.
That he lied, deceived me.
All to get control of the company.
And when Ian When Ian found out How did Ian find out? He was clearing out his father's study.
He told me he'd found a sketchbook amongst Alan's things.
A sketchbook? Yes.
Alan had one with him always.
He had one with him in China.
Ian came to me and said he had something awful to tell me.
If only I'd believed him! He would still be alive! BITTER SOBBING Shall we take a break? Sophie Baxter, sir.
Missing persons have tracked down a relative who's suggested a possible location they're following up.
Good.
So you believe Mrs King? Think Charles killed his brother and Ian to get control of the company? Something made her believe it enough to want to kill her own husband.
What if she'd killed her first husband as well? She marries Charles, kills her son, she gets control of the company.
Yeah.
But how could she kill Alan King? He was in China, she was here.
And why would she want to kill Peter Baxter? He was a fly in the ointment? Or he knew too much? She was the one who discovered the body.
If Alan King had a sketchbook in China, the Great Wall and stuff, that would have been returned with the rest of his belongings.
'Hello, Ian.
' 'Looking for me? No, just out for a walk.
' Ah! Found it? Oh.
"Charles and Peter Baxter are stripping the company's assets, "setting up accounts in the Caymans "with some Chinese consortium.
"Whole thing stinks!" My brother was delightful, but completely out of touch with reality.
It was the market that broke King's Crystal, not any malfeasance on my part.
Did you kill him? I loved my brother.
You need to know Hilary.
She's hard as nails.
Gets what she wants.
The rest is window-dressing.
She's as unstable as Ian was.
Ian found that sketchbook later.
That confirmed his suspicions.
You and Baxter had defrauded the company.
Ian had gone to the offices of King's Crystal searching for proof.
The evidence that Peter Baxter himself had come to destroy.
DAGGER CLATTERS What are you doing here? Ian, what are you doing here? Just tell me.
Peter! Let go! Tell me what you're doing here! Peter, stop it! What are you looking for? Peter! What are you looking COMMOTION SOUNDS OF STRUGGLE 'And during a struggle, Peter Baxter was accidentally stabbed.
'Then Ian panicked.
'He bundled the body into the boot of the car.
'He put on Baxter's cap and drove down to the water meadow.
' If all that's true, then Baxter's death has nothing to do with me.
Where were you when Ian died? I was at a Masonic charity do.
Then came home.
And your wife? Hilary was in bed, pretending sleep.
I noticed the light was on in her barn and found Ian there, already dead.
Hilary's told us of a conversation you and she had in the barn earlier that day.
Back in a sec.
I'll give you a hand hanging those up.
Ian has told me something awful.
About Peter Baxter's death.
'Ian had indeed told her something awful.
'He told her that he had killed Peter Baxter.
' And more than that, Hilary said that Ian had told her that he believed that you had killed his father, Alan.
That was her fatal mistake, wasn't it? Because once you heard that, you knew Ian had to be silenced because he was right, wasn't he? You did kill Alan King.
It was an accident.
A car crash.
Look, I'm the one who's the victim here.
It's me she tried to kill.
Only after I told her Ian's death was not suicide.
'Then she knew that everything Ian had told her was true.
'And that you had silenced him.
' Hilary? 'Then, of course, she wanted revenge.
' So that's the line she's been spinning you.
Is that all, or have you got anything more vague? That is what happened, Mr King.
You haven't a shred of evidence for any of your fanciful allegations.
I want my lawyer.
Hilary? I was looking for Hilary.
The police are holding her and Charles.
Why? I don't know.
What happened to you? Where have you been? I couldn't take it any more.
I had to go and see a friend in the north.
Poor Ian! It's just so I still can't believe it.
Last time I saw him, I hated him.
I can't bear that.
All that crazy behaviour, things he said, he was trying to protect you.
Protect me? From the whole mess in his head.
He couldn't bear it.
If it's any comfort, I know he loved you.
Really loved you.
You loved him, too, didn't you? How are bookings for the play, then? Fine, thanks.
Cully I apologise for leaving like that.
It was a work matter.
Something very important.
Of course.
More important than my work, I'm sure.
You completely ruined my entire performance, Dad.
I'm sorry.
Can I give you a lift? No, thanks.
I'll walk.
Do a line run.
Don't want to dry again.
Thanks, Mum.
Leave it, Tom.
She's very stressed.
Well, she's not alone in that.
Do you want a drink? No, thanks.
What is happening? Can you tell me? Yes.
I have a wife and a husband each accusing the other of murder.
Very little evidence, beside my own gut feelings.
Any witnesses? No.
Only victims.
No help there, then.
Unless What? Unless there's a silent witness that could tell us exactly what happened.
Sophie Baxter's turned up in the village.
Has she? Oh, thank God for that.
You can give her a good telling off for leaving the scene of a police investigation.
Big call, sir, digging him up.
But if I'm right, I'm sure his widow will forgive us.
The Consulate papers that were flown back with Alan King's body say that he died as a result of a car crash and subsequent burn-out.
But were they right? I thought so, until I examined the contents of his stomach.
I found significant quantities of finely-ground glass.
Glass? It's a new one on me, too.
So I dug out the books and there it was.
A rare form of poisoning particular to China.
So Alan King was poisoned by Charles and that caused him to crash.
Are you sure? Mm-hmm.
He would have been dead within 20 minutes.
And then I'll take you to a custody suite where you'll be formally charged with the murders of Ian King and Alan King.
Nonsense! That is not true! Oh, Mr King.
Truth is what a jury will believe.
I'm sure they'll be convinced you are as guilty as we know you are.
You're gonna have to admit it, Mr King.
To me, to the court and to yourself.
Don't cut your finger again, sir.
I've got something for you.
It's the one I got when I joined the lodge.
Oh, thank you! No use to me now.
The brotherhood have me down as a traitor.
They slice out traitors' tongues and bury them at low-tide, I believe! I appreciated your trust over the Masons' thing.
Trust, Jones, is something hard to win, easy to lose and never to be taken lightly.
William Shakespeare, sir? No.
Thomas Barnaby.
Thank you.
Don't we have to be nearby? Leave that to me.
Also, how do you feel about these two? What do you think about that? PHONE RINGS Charles King.
It's Hilary.
Hilary, my dear.
How are you? Fine.
Alan, it's Hilary.
Thank you.
Darling.
You have news? Yes.
The Arts Council grant's been approved.
The theatre can re-open.
Brilliant! Yes, wonderful.
Ian's down from Cambridge.
Well done, Dad! I'll pick you up at Heathrow tomorrow.
Can't wait to see you.
How's it been out there? Charles and Peter Baxter have done all the business.
I've just been a tourist.
I'm letting them get on with it.
I'll tell you about it tomorrow.
Safe journey! Bye! Well, we've saved the theatre! Good.
Let's hope we've saved the business as well.
SCREECH OF TYRES END-OF-SHIFT SIREN BLOWS Look at this, then! What's that? I don't believe it! Come on! Jack, take a look at this! Jack! What? Boys, come and have a look at this! What the hell's that? Wouldn't you just know it? HORN BLARES HORN BLASTS ANGRILY What's all this, then, Mr King? I don't like your tone, Tewson.
No more than I like yours, Baxter.
We're trying to raise capital to save your jobs.
Alan King would never have done this.
He's not even in his grave yet.
I think I know what my brother's wishes were, Jack.
I'll see you at the funeral, I hope.
Oh, you will! POUNDS HORN (WORKER) Go on! Get lost! Are you family? A friend of Ian's, Alan King's son.
Where's Ian? I don't know.
Now, bride and groom, best man Peter, on my right.
Have you seen Ian? He's round the back, mooning about with his nancy boyfriend.
Dad! What?! Ignore him, Hilary.
Now, everyone this way! Say, "One, two, three!" You're wanted.
Sorry.
I'm not grinning in some cheesy photograph.
Give it a rest, Ian.
Dead just six months and she's coupling up with his brother! It's disgusting! That is so unfair.
Is this fair? To my father? Does she care? Hilary was devastated when your father died.
If you'd stayed around, you'd have known.
She wanted me out of the way, back at university.
Charles supported her through it all, Ian.
He was here for her.
He loves her.
That's fine, then (!) Let's all move on.
Here's to the happy couple! She's entitled to her happiness! But she needs you.
Please don't push her away.
You're pushing everyone away, Ian.
People are leaving.
Ian, is this what your dad would really want? No, my father He'd most likely say, "Good luck, Hils.
Go for it.
Make your fun happen.
" So? How can we put a smile on your face? By not going to this bloody reception.
OK, so we give it a miss.
Come on, let's get hammered.
Get down the club.
This is Midsomer.
There's only Cawston.
"Only"? Nowhere better! Every hour is happy hour in Cawston! Beautiful dress, Soph.
Oh, thanks! You haven't forgotten Tuesday? Oh.
I can't make it.
I'm sorry.
We'll do it another time, OK? Sorry! Everybody! Ready? I've got to say, she's very fit! And she knows it.
How embarrassing! Don't tell me you fancy her? Wrong gender, love.
But she definitely fancies you! This I do not believe! How dare you come here? Just making a point.
Today of all days! We're not going anywhere, Baxter.
We're not gonna sit at home like dumbbells! Clear off, all of you.
Go on, clear off! Not until you see us right! Get off! ANGRY SHOUTING Just go! You will pay for this! DISGRUNTLED MURMURINGS What's this about the pensions money? Vanished.
Like snow off a roof.
Slipped quietly into your family's pockets.
I promise I know nothing about this.
You're going to hear about it loud and long.
In the meantime, go and swill your champagne.
And remember, we bought it for you! Ian.
Come on.
HORN BLARES, PROTESTORS SHOUT All three Gifford brothers stood in the dock smirking.
And? Judge Lloyd starts.
Ten years, twelve years, ten.
A great result.
Yes! Yes! Ow! All right, sir? Paper cut? Oh, dear! Oh, it's from Cully.
She's playing at the old open-air theatre, you know.
They've just re-opened it and this is their first production.
Would you stick that up on the notice board? I find Shakespeare a bit hard-going, to be honest, sir.
A bit of a snore.
Yeah, well, four hours on a stone seat in the open air is hard going.
Four hours?! Unfortunately, Jones, brevity was never the soul of Shakespeare's wit.
Yeah! Sentences longer than Judge Lloyd's! Oh, perfect! Just the right shade.
How much do I owe you? Don't be silly! Hi, Soph! Would you join us for lunch? Ian's working down in the water meadows.
No, thanks.
Give him my love.
I will.
And his to you, I'm sure.
Ciao! Did you see Ian while I was away? No.
He's not returning my calls.
It's like there was never anything between us.
No, I can't reach him, either.
I think it may be He's still grieving for his father's death.
And my marriage.
He's so angry with me, Sophie.
So angry.
Here in the worshipful lodge of the vale of Midsomer, I hereby do most solemnly promise and swear that I will always hail the secret arts' heart.
The master's rehearsing the third degree and cannot be interrupted.
Don't be ridiculous! You cannot enter the temple in a state of undress! Out of my way! Murder and treason KERFUFFLE Sorry, Worshipful Master! Charles, we need to speak.
Could you wait without, please, James? Tewson has been pouring poison into the receivers' ears.
They're querying the accounts.
It's a receiver's job.
Routine, Peter, that's all.
Charlie, if those figures come unwrapped, we are liable! You're the accountant! If this is you wriggling, forget it.
You signed the accounts.
They're asking some very difficult questions.
I'm sure we'll find the answers, as long as you don't panic.
I'll sort out Tewson.
Now, go home and get a grip! Cully, love! Give me that.
Thanks.
What have you got in here? Costumes for the play.
Can't somebody do that for you? Wardrobe people? It's not a West End job, Dad! It's 200 quid a week and wash your own frocks! We're actors.
We do it for love.
Certainly not for the money! For sale? He wasn't bluffing, then.
Doesn't look like it.
You can't do this, Dad! I go away for a couple It's my house.
I'll sell it when I see fit! I'm not moving! What happened? Who did this? Who do you think did it? The mob from the factory, I expect.
I'm not staying here to get any more windows smashed.
I've had enough.
And me, what am I supposed to do? Grow up and look after yourself for a change! Soph, are you all right? I'm fine, James.
Thanks for the lift.
OK.
You are not welcome here, either.
CREAKING What are you doing here? HORN BLARES Idiot! About five minutes ago.
Lying in the stream.
Yes, I do.
His name is Baxter.
Peter Baxter.
He's down there.
Seen anything? No.
Tom! The lungs are full of water, but it's not a straightforward drowning.
Was he held under? There's a stab wound, entry between the sixth and seventh rib.
It's collapsed the lung and left a sucking wound that's drawn in water.
Weapon? Nothing so far.
Time of death? Sometime last night.
I'll know better later, hopefully.
Thank you.
The victim's name is Peter Baxter.
That's his car.
So he came here to meet someone.
Yeah.
Or brought someone down here, maybe.
He lives nearby, according to Mrs King.
She found him.
I see her.
Right.
You carry on here.
Sir.
Mrs King? I'm Chief Inspector Barnaby from Cawston CID.
I've given my statement to this young woman.
I'd like to go home now.
Yes, of course.
I was just wondering how well did you know Mr Baxter? Peter was chief accountant at my husband's firm, King's Crystal.
Look, I was collecting flowers this morning and there he was in the stream.
He's got a daughter, Sophie.
I'd like to be the one to tell her what's happened.
That's all right.
We'll handle that.
Right.
OK, thank you.
That's it.
You can go now.
But would you mind leaving that knife with me, please? As long as I get it back.
Thinking of buying, sir? Not without robbing a bank.
Can I help you? Miss Baxter? Miss Sophie Baxter? Yes.
I'm Detective Chief Inspector Barnaby.
This is DS Jones, from Cawston CID.
May we come in? Sorry about the mess.
Miss Baxter I'm very sorry to have to tell you that Mr Baxter, your father, was found dead this morning.
We're also treating it as a murder.
Miss Baxter, when did you last see your father? Umyesterday.
Here.
We had an awful row.
It was about the house.
About selling the house? Yes.
I suppose he's just pushed someone too far.
Any idea who? No.
I know there's been business worries.
To do with King's Crystal? I remember there was a lot of bad press about its closure.
When I tried to talk to him, he just said I was spoiling his drink.
So he'd made enemies? My father didn't know how to make friends.
KNOCKING Sorry, Soph.
Oh, James! These are the police.
I just heard.
Come on.
Well, we'll leave you two to talk.
Mr? Taylor.
James Taylor.
SHE SOBS I'm not sorry he's dead.
Don't say such things, Ian.
Why are you being so hateful to everyone? Am I? It's about me and Charles, isn't it? I know it's difficult, but can't you just respect Respect? I loved your father as much as you did, Ian.
Alan was You hardly had time to change the sheets before you were screwing his brother! Ian! Keep a civil tongue in your head! Since when do you give me orders? Stop it, Ian.
Don't Don't what? You married him.
I didn't.
Ian! Detective Chief Inspector Barnaby.
Charles King.
How do you do? Detective Sergeant Jones.
How do you do? Dreadful news about Peter.
Shall we go inside? Was he in any way responsible for the company's bankruptcy? The firm was past its sell-by date.
We're starting afresh in Shanghai.
King's Crystal is going to be made in China? In 20 years' time, everything will be.
One has to move with the times.
Can I get you a drink? No.
No, thank you.
Mr King, we suspect that Mr Baxter was murdered.
Murdered?! By whom? I understand he made enemies when King's Crystal was closed down.
We did receive threats, yes.
Were they verbal? Letters? What were they? They were demonstrations.
Demonstrations - you mean workers at the factory? Yes, a chap called Tewson was the ringleader.
Jack Tewson.
Peter wouldn't go out of his way to be popular, but he was fair and on the square with everybody.
I lost a friend and a brilliant accountant.
Alan King - that would be Charles King's elder brother.
He owned half of King's Crystal with Charles.
Alan was always a sleeping partner.
"Teacher of drama.
" Would that be at Cawston comprehensive? I believe so.
Yes, I remember him.
A lovely man.
It was he who first introduced Cully to the stage.
This stone will be laid at the theatre.
He raised most of the money to reopen it.
Charles King and Peter Baxter were in some money trouble over King's Crystal.
That right? There's been talk, yes.
Mr Taylor, were you there when the big row erupted between Sophie and her father yesterday? Yes, I drove her home.
She got upset about him selling the house.
Are you and Sophie close? Used to be, yes.
Baxter put the blocks on it.
He wanted to match her with Ian King, her class of person.
He thought I was chasing a meal ticket.
Accountants! Money's all they see in everything.
They're saying round the village he drowned, right? No, he was stabbed.
Stabbed? Now, I get it! You're wasting your time looking at me.
Right, George.
That's good.
Are they still searching? Right.
Thank you.
That's Bullard.
The murder weapon was a sharp implement eight inches long.
Still no sign of it.
Charles King, sir.
He's Mr Clean.
Not even a speeding ticket.
Director of several companies.
Spotless credit check.
He's divorced and recently remarried.
And he's a Mason.
Ah.
You spotted the handshake? Yes, I did.
I think I should tell you I was once a member of the Masons.
Were you? Yes, sir, Cawston Lodge.
Thought it might help with my promotion.
You never know.
Policemen, Masons.
There's always the perception of divided loyalty.
But your Masonic membership may come in useful on this one.
If it takes us there, fine by me.
I've invited Sophie for dinner.
She shouldn't be on her own after what's happened.
That'll be nice.
Maybe you'd like to join us.
No, thanks.
Dave and I are busy.
Ian, please! I can't take much more of you being like this.
How would you like me to be? I'd like my son back.
That's what I want.
Do you hate me so much? Don't take it to heart, Hilary.
Will you be staying much longer? For as long as Ian wants me to.
If that's all right.
This is ã2,000.
Or we can do something simple for 500.
It only goes up in flames, anyway.
Whatever.
You take care of it.
And what about you, Soph? Will you let me take care of you? Oh, James.
Now he's gone, there's nothing standing between us.
I love you.
You know that.
James, please don't.
Not here.
Not now! Please don't.
It's Ian, isn't it? You're still burning a candle for him.
Is Ian on your doorstep asking you what you need? Is he the one taking care of you? No.
I am.
James, I appreciate everything you've done.
It's just I'm sorry.
It's amazing, that.
I bought my gran a piece of King's Crystal for her ruby wedding.
She's still got it.
I thought this place had been closed down.
It has.
We're just completing an order for the receivers.
Oh, listen to that.
Dead silence.
Full of machines, once.
Making stained glass, art glass.
Blowing shops all along the back.
Near to 100 worked here.
Craftsmen and women.
All gone now.
I suppose you're here about Baxter.
Come with me.
There's something you ought to see.
I can't pretend I was too sorry to hear about Baxter.
Did you threaten him, Mr Tewson? We had words from time to time.
This is Baxter's office.
This is normally kept locked but we were broken into last night.
Seems they were looking for something.
Looking for something? Looking for what, Mr Tewson? I don't know.
Evidence, perhaps? Money's disappeared.
Our redundancy pay, our pensions.
Where were you last night? I was at home, alone, drinking.
I've been doing a lot of that these days.
Got any ideas who might have done this? I don't know.
It could be Alan King's son, Ian.
He inherited part of the company.
But Baxter and his uncle are keeping him in the dark about it.
Perhaps he came to look.
You know Ian well enough to think he might do such a thing? I know he's not a happy boy.
Go on, Mr Tewson.
His mother, the merry widow, married his Uncle Charles.
I know he's very upset about that.
OK.
Thank you, Mr Tewson.
Thank you.
Fine.
I'm doing a PhD in biology.
The insect life of Midsomer's water meadows.
We are investigating the death of Peter Baxter.
I've not seen him for days.
I saw Mr Baxter last night.
I was out posting a letter.
He nearly wiped me up with his car.
What time was this, Mr? Monroe.
David Monroe.
Must have been about elevenish.
Where were you at that time? I'd gone for a walk.
You didn't go to the King's Crystal factory? No.
I've not been there since Dad died.
Your dad left you part of the family business, I understand.
He left me shares, yes.
Were you involved with Mr Baxter and your uncle in the closure of that factory? No.
If my father had been alive, he'd never have allowed it to happen.
The rot set in after he died.
What do you mean, "the rot"? You mean corrupt practice on the part of Charles King and Peter Baxter? Those two were as close as the fingers on your hand.
Not a scrap of conscience between them.
And your mother, Hilary? What was her involvement with the company? Who knows? All my life I thought I knew my mother.
Whoever she is, she hides it well.
Hides what? I thought she loved my father.
And then she goes and Ian So you'd met Mr Baxter before, had you? Since you recognised him last night.
Yes, a few times.
Nasty puffball of a man.
He used to call me "the nancy-boy".
I'm sorry he died how he did, but Well, maybe the gods are happy.
MOBILE RINGS Yeah? Ah! Good.
Be there in a couple of minutes.
They've found the murder weapon.
Sir! Tom! That's an ornamental dagger of some sort.
It's a Masonic ceremonial dagger.
Is it? Yeah.
See the symbol there? Set square and compass.
What's these letters? J-O-B.
J-O-B.
Someone's initials and a date? Possibly.
How many of your father's books do you want to keep? Secrets of Ancient China? Oxfam.
My father's Masonic regalia.
Ah.
One of the secret squirrels, was he? It fits the entry wound and there's a DNA match to Baxter.
There's a piece missing from the tip of the blade.
Fresh break.
The knife may have hit a rib, but the fragment's not turned up.
Anything else? Hilary King's pruning knife.
Clean.
No connection.
So that's it from me.
Thank you, George.
Thank you.
Fraud Squad says King's Crystal looks a bit iffy.
Several paper companies shuffling money about.
Any sign of Baxter's cap yet? No, sir, we're still looking.
J-O-B.
Peter Baxter was an accountant, wasn't he? He could have been a Mason.
But these are not his initials.
So maybe he was stabbed by another member of the brotherhood.
I've got it! Sorry, sir! J-O-B.
It stands for Jahweh Osiris Baal.
They're the ineffable trinity of Masonic gods.
Are they? Yes.
So these are not the initials of a particular member? No.
But Charles King is certainly one of the cloth, isn't he? Maybe he found out Baxter had his fingers in the till.
Could well be.
Want me to do some digging, sir? Yes, I do.
The Masons may not be a secret society but they are certainly a society with secrets.
There's a Sergeant Jones to see you.
Show him in.
Good afternoon.
Sorry to disturb you, Mr King, but I think you may be able to help me if we can speak on the square.
Can I show you this? We believe it was used to kill Mr Baxter.
Ever seen it before? I have seen many like it.
It's a poignard, a replica of our ceremonial dagger.
Every apprentice in the Midsomer Lodges receives one on being entered.
As you'll be aware.
Yes, but I've never seen one with a date stamped on it before.
Here.
16th of the 12th 02.
No, our lodge uses a simple code.
The numbers are letters of the alphabet.
P.
L.
B.
Peter Leonard Baxter.
This was Peter's.
So where would he have kept this? He was a little cavalier about matters Masonic.
Often it would be in his briefcase.
He used it sometimes in his office as a paper knife.
Thank you.
It's been very helpful.
And you're a little rusty about matters Masonic.
Our lodge meeting is the second Thursday of the month.
Visitors always welcome.
Thanks.
Better get my apron ironed! Hello, Ian.
Looking for me? No, no.
Just out for a walk.
Is Cully Barnaby your daughter? The actress playing Ophelia? Yes, she is.
It was your father raised the money to re-open the theatre, wasn't it? One of my dad's dreams.
After he died, I wanted to see the project through.
I thought you were a biologist? I am.
But since I found myself standing in for my father, I took advantage of the situation.
I chose Hamlet as the first production.
For my mother.
Her favourite? No, I just thought it would do her good to see it.
Must go.
I've got some business to do.
Bye.
There's rue for you.
And here's some for me.
You must wear your rue with a difference.
There's a daisy.
I would give you some violets, but they withered all when my father died.
They say he made a good end.
OK, thank you, Cully, love.
Hold it there.
Take a break, everybody.
Next call, Hamlet! Cully.
Yes? Delicious.
Very nice.
But a bit too winsome, perhaps.
Forget the acting.
Just a bit more unstable.
OK.
Right, Hamlet.
We'll have another go at To Be Or Not To Be.
And listen.
The man is 28 years old, not 16.
So less hormonal and much more metaphysical.
He's a hard man to please.
The man couldn't direct traffic! The wound shows an angle of entry something like that.
So Baxter could have killed himself.
And then dropped it in the stream? It's possible.
What about the missing fragment from the blade? It's definitely not in the body.
This is not adding up, is it? Baxter left no note.
He was selling his house.
He was moving on, not killing himself.
And there were no prints on that dagger.
He was wearing driving gloves.
Yes, but he used it as a paper knife.
So the handle was obviously wiped clean.
Of course.
Baxter was murdered.
Jones, I want you to take up Charles King's invitation to his lodge.
Sir.
Keep an eye on him and see who else has taken vows at the Vale of Midsomer Chapter.
It's a hanging offence to betray the Brothers' secrets, sir.
Got a problem with that? No.
I'll survive.
I hope! ECHOING VOICES: 'Come on! Lift it! 'A batch of 15.
'Keep a look out.
'I need two more.
' What's this about? I was just remembering how it was when I was a kid.
It's gone, Ian.
We can't change yesterday.
No.
I wanted to say to you, Charles, I know I've been a top-class pain in the past few months.
You certainly have.
I wanted to apologise.
I was very close to my father.
I loved him too, Ian.
I felt angry that all this had come to nothing.
No, it hasn't.
We're finished here, but we'll be expanding abroad.
I can show you the plans.
I'm not a businessman.
Nor was Alan, but when we were in China he could see for himself.
He understood why we had to make the change.
And I'm sure his best wish would be that you could be as passionate about the future as he was.
Maybe we should talk about it.
I'd prefer that to the verbal battering I've been getting.
Sorry.
I have to say I've been worried about you.
My head's been in a bell for God knows how long.
This is all very sudden.
What's happened? I don't know.
I woke up this morning and something had lifted.
I felt released.
Ian, I have no heir.
No son.
I'd like nothing better than that you and I should be family.
I'd like that too.
It's what Dad would have wanted.
Ah! Hello, what have we here? Off to stick up some play bills.
Are you? Now, Joyce, you do know that strictly speaking, fly-posting is illegal.
Oh, have a day off, Dad! We've got to publicise the show.
Did you stick up the one I sent to the station? Yes, but that was in the police canteen.
Good.
Here, take a few more.
Put them up in some of your regular watering holes.
Cully, Joyce, I really do think Tom, it's hardly the crime of the century.
Well, on your own heads be it.
Oh! Scary! WATERFOWL QUACK KEYPAD BLEEPS MOBILE RINGS David? Where's lunch? Bye! Hey! GUNSHOT Let go! Let go! What's happening? He was aiming at you.
Rot! I was after rabbits! That's not how it looked to me! Give him his gun, David! Give me the gun.
It's Jack, isn't it? Jack Tewson.
That's right.
We met outside the church.
At the wedding.
I remember seeing you blowing glass.
As a kid, when my father brought me round the factory.
Fantastic! Yeah? I worked for 30 years for your family.
A lifetime's apprenticeship.
Then they walked off and left me potless.
Believe me, "fantastic" is not the word.
The company's gone bust, friend.
It happens.
So does fraud, embezzlement, thieving.
Not my father.
We all thought that.
But I bet he's left you your share, hasn't he? He might have been hunting rabbits, but he had you in his sights.
He had been drinking.
Maybe he was tempted.
Maybe he has reason if the company ripped him off.
Whatever, you're not responsible.
Neither was my father.
Craftsmen like Tewson were his people.
He admired them.
He felt responsible for them.
And so do I.
Our Masonic temple is fashioned of living souls.
And each entered apprentice shall wear this apron.
This is his body of mortality, his veil of flesh and blood clothing his inner soul.
His badge of innocence and purity given to all by the great architect of the universe.
This apron shall he wear as we wear these, our gloves of white, for we have each washed our hands in innocence.
THREE LOUD KNOCKS Who seeks entrance? A poor candidate in a state of darkness, hoodwinked and slipshod, seeks entrance.
Let him be entered.
I receive you at point of knife pressed to your naked breast to teach you, as this is a torture to your flesh, so would it be to your conscience if you ever fail to keep a brother Mason's secrets inviolable.
You will pledge ever to conceal never to reveal all secrets - murder and treason excepted.
I knew them when they were lads.
Worked for me here in their school holidays.
Chalk and cheese.
How's that? Charles had a business head on him even then.
Practical.
Alan was on another planet.
Oh, look who's here! It's you, is it, eh? Finally found your way down here, have you? Mr Tewson, please! That Baxter was a thief.
If you shook hands with him, you had to count your fingers.
I wasn't upset when I heard what had happened.
Change the record, Tewson.
That mate of yours, Ian.
He's probably had his cut already.
They're all the same.
They all piss in the same pot.
Good evening, Mr Tewson.
Oh, it's God's detective.
Who killed Baxter? Solved it yet, Sherlock? Let's have you, Jack.
Finish up.
I've finished.
I did my last day's work today.
I'm now on the dole.
On the old jam roll.
Well, roll yourself home.
Are you any further on, Mr Barnaby? David, these things take a little time, you know.
I take it you've met Mr Tewson before.
With a rifle, yes.
He was taking a pot-shot at Ian.
A pot-shot? Where was this? Above the water meadows.
Ian was working there.
Tewson claimed he was shooting at rabbits.
I'm not so sure.
To complete the business in hand, to our fellow Mason, newly entered as apprentice to this lodge, let the blessing of light be restored.
Congratulations.
(JONES) 'Guess who the new initiate was.
Ian King.
' Ian King has joined the lodge? Ian King? He seemed very keen to ingratiate himself with his stepfather.
I think he's got ambitions.
Maybe Baxter got in his way.
Hey.
Update from the Fraud Squad.
Apparently, our Mr Baxter was a very creative accountant.
See page three.
Uniform had something on him too, sir.
He reported a brick through his window the day before he died.
My guess is Jack Tewson and Rentamob from the factory.
Yeah.
Baxter's solicitor tells me he's left a very substantial estate with sums as yet undisclosed in offshore accounts.
Oh, James Taylor was there last night too, so he's a member.
Think he could have killed Baxter? So Sophie could get the money? It's possible, isn't it? Maybe he thought if he got rid of Baxter they could all live happily ever after.
Hilary? Hilary? Oh, God, Ian! Oh, you made my heart skip! Let me listen.
Let me hear it.
Ian, stop it.
Don't be silly! Silly? I'm sorry.
Maybe it's Midsomer Madness! May I be philosophical with you for a moment? I've concluded that life is an effort that deserves a better course.
Sorry? I'm ditching my PhD.
Big left turn.
Bye-bye Biology.
Why? What for? Money! What everyone wants.
Are you mocking me? No, it's true.
Ask who wants to be a millionaire, and half the world phones up.
You're pissed! I swear I'm stone cold sober.
I remember you, Sophie.
Fresh and bright-eyed.
I remember you, too, Ian.
Tell me.
Was it lust at first sight? Don't suppose you're feeling frisky, are you? You are mocking me! See, no sense of humour.
There are reasons why some people are alone.
James was right! You're a spoilt brat! How dare you make fun of me? Hey! What's going on? I don't care if I never see you again! Ian? I'm just saving her from herself.
You never can tell with women, can you? And if you can, you probably shouldn't, right? What are you playing at? I've joined the Masons.
Why? Like father, like son? I'm getting close to the truth.
About what? You mean Baxter? You know who killed Sophie's father? Yes.
Who? The less you know about it, the better.
I want us to try to sort out our outstanding difficulties.
You want to smooth things over, eh? There were some monies due to your members, Jack.
Peter Baxter did a complete audit shortly before he died.
Sucked more figures out of his thumb, did he? I'm prepared to accept there might be some inequity in the way Peter dealt with the accounts.
You can say that again.
We might be able to find some funds to compensate you.
Perhaps only a percentage - say, ten pence in the pound.
Don't insult us, Mr King! At least have a look at the offer, Jack.
Take it away.
Discuss it.
Before I do, there's something I want you to read.
Where did you get these? Dropped onto my mat, sent anonymously.
They must have been stolen from the office.
If they're stolen, we'd better call the police.
Let me go over these.
Then perhaps we can meet again.
I'll meet you in court.
I'm trying to sort this mess out, Jack.
So am I.
Ian and I met at university two years ago.
We're good friends.
Just good friends? I've nothing to hide.
I'd like it to be more than that, but Ian's not inclined.
You told me that you have some information.
I haven't, but I think Ian has.
He told me he knows who killed Peter Baxter.
Who? He won't give me a name.
I tried, but he stonewalled.
Ian's head's been in bits ever since his father died.
I'm worried he's in danger.
Could you arrange with him to meet on your own? Somewhere quiet, like here? That's another thing.
He says he's given all of this the elbow.
David, wherever he agrees to meet you, let me know.
I'll join you.
Maybe between the two of us we can persuade him to tell us exactly what he does know.
It matches exactly the piece that was missing from the dagger, sir.
Where was it found? At the King's Crystal office that was ransacked.
Forensics found it, jammed in one of the drawer locks.
Charles King said Peter Baxter often used this dagger in his office.
Yeah.
So someone gets in and uses it on the drawer.
Sounds about right, but doesn't tell us who.
No, but it does tell us that whoever ransacked that office was probably also Baxter's killer.
Sophie! Sophie! I don't believe you, Ian! How can you say such a thing? Everything all right? Yes, Charles, just a tiff.
Mother and son thing.
Back in a sec.
I'll give you a hand hanging those up.
I thought things were fine.
He was on great form at the lodge meeting.
What happened? Ian has told me something awful.
About Peter Baxter's death.
He's not here? No, not yet.
I arranged to pick him up.
He didn't show.
I can't find him anywhere.
I'm worried about Sophie, too.
Sophie Baxter? Yes.
Are you? MOBILE RINGS Excuse me.
Barnaby.
Oh.
Um, listen, you stay there.
I'll be with you as soon as I can.
Has he shown up? Yes.
Yes, he has.
Thank God for that.
Where? You'd better come with me.
You first.
You stay there.
Charles King found him hanging from a beam.
He managed to get him down, but according to him, Ian was already dead.
Where's Bullard? On his way.
There's no sign of a struggle, so my first thoughts are suicide.
Could be.
But David Monroe told me he thought Ian was in danger from whoever killed Peter Baxter.
Monroe set up that meeting with you.
Maybe to alibi himself for the time of Ian King's death.
What would be his motive? Unrequited love? He leans that way, doesn't he? But why, why would David Monroe kill Baxter? Pass.
The other thing is the rope.
It's a cable term.
A what? A cable term.
It's used in Masonic ceremonies to lead in initiates.
David Monroe also told me that Sophie has disappeared.
Go round the house and check.
And since Charles King found the body, I'll start with him.
OK? Mr King? My wife is in deep shock.
She's taken a sleeping tablet.
I'll speak to her later.
I've told Sergeant Jones everything I know about what happened.
I feel pretty bloody about this, Barnaby.
Hilary and I realised that Ian was becoming more and more unstable.
I'm not a psychiatrist, but I do know Ian was deeply unhappy.
I told you he was in danger.
I warned you.
There's a killer out there.
I warned you! Police! Sophie! He taught me drama in my sixth form.
He should have been a professional director.
We could have done with him on this.
"Get thee to a nunnery", next.
See what shape that's in, shall we? Cully, how do we get our moody Dane to shape up? He needs encouragement, Harold.
Not just endless put-downs.
I've tried.
It's just not working.
I ask for existential despair and he comes on like a singer in a boy band! And now, to cap it all, Polonius has got laryngitis.
What? Can we get a stand-in? I'm afraid you're looking at him, love.
Oh.
Nothing, yet.
Not a sign.
Left her mobile.
ANSWERPHONE BLEEPS Miss Baxter, you have one message.
'Miss Baxter, Midsomer Dental here.
You missed your appointment yesterday.
Phone to rebook.
' Several missed calls from James Taylor.
You don't think that sack could have been used to carry her, sir? Take Higgins with you.
Bring James Taylor in.
Ask him if he'd like to help us with our enquiries.
Don't take no for an answer.
Thank you.
There we go.
Now, James.
Could you tell us, please, about that black sack you were seen removing from Honey Tree House, yesterday? Sophie asked me to take her father's clothes to the Oxfam.
A witness said it looked heavy.
Yeah.
Clothes and books.
It was heavy.
Where is it now? I left it outside the shop in Cawston last night.
They'll be there.
Unless someone's stole them.
Did Sophie give you no indication where she'd gone? She's got a friend up north somewhere.
Fiona something.
When it comes to trouble with Ian King, I'm not the best shoulder for her to cry on.
She knows my feelings.
What feelings, Mr Taylor? Jealousy? Hostility? She rejected you in favour of him, yes? You could say that, yeah.
Did you make contact with Ian King after she'd gone? No.
I thought this was about Sophie.
James, two people have died.
And Sophie is missing.
I wouldn't harm Sophie for the world! Look, I admit I loathed Baxter and I despised Ian King.
You assisted at Ian's initiation, didn't you? Led him into the temple by the noose.
The kind of noose that hung him.
Neither his blood nor Baxter's is on my conscience.
You may think the craft just a load of rituals, but to me, it's a state of grace.
Built on respect for the living souls of all true brothers.
I think he's telling the truth.
Guilty or not, he gave me the evil eye, sir.
Got a proper Mason's warning off him.
It's Bullard's preliminary report on Ian King.
He'd been heavily sedated.
Barbiturates.
So not a suicide.
We need to talk to Hilary King.
Mrs King.
I'm sorry to disturb you.
Your husband told us you were up here.
One of my husbands, Mr Barnaby.
Yes.
Mrs King .
.
did Ian ever speak to you about who killed Mr Baxter? What do you mean? He spoke to his friend, David Monroe, about it.
He seemed upset.
His father's death hit Ian hard.
They were so alike.
Passionate, sensitive, sometimes a little crazy, both of them.
Did you get the impression Ian was becoming more disturbed, lately? He was very upset about my marriage.
He did all he could to dissuade me.
Perhaps there was some method in his madness.
But recently he'd seemed to accept Charles.
He'd even begun to take an interest in the business.
I can't believe what he's done.
Mrs King, I have to tell you that we suspect Ian's death was not self-inflicted.
In fact, we believe that Ian was murdered.
What?! He'd been heavily sedated some time before he was found.
No! No! Now, Mrs King No! Oh, no! I'm sorry.
I can't believe Oh, God! No! ANGUISHED SOBBING What if Sophie's run, sir? Both killings could be down to her.
She could have stabbed Baxter.
And hoisted him onto that beam? Maybe her with somebody else? Oi! Hang on! Young man! Come here.
Can I see? Where did you find this? In the bushes, over there.
We didn't nick it.
No, you're not in any trouble.
But I think we know who owns this.
I'll hang on to it, if I may.
That's ours! Finders keepers.
Off you go, the pair of you.
David Monroe says he saw Peter Baxter drive past him the night he died.
He recognised him by the car and the cap he was wearing.
Yeah.
So what's it doing here? It could have blown off.
It's an open-topped car.
Thank you, Rupert.
Thank you, sir.
If it had blown off passing the green, then David Monroe couldn't have seen the driver wearing it by the post box half a mile beyond here.
That's true.
What if someone else was wearing the cap to make him look like Baxter? I mean, the knife, the fragment in the drawer lock, what if that night Baxter had disturbed that someone else searching the offices? And he turned the knife on Baxter? Yeah.
So what Monroe actually saw was Baxter's killer driving his car and wearing his cap which he later threw into the bushes.
Then what? He drives to the water meadows.
Baxter's dead by this time, in the back seat, boot, whatever.
He dumps the body, dumps the knife, leaves the car.
So how did the cap end up in the bushes? Well, I'm thinking that he runs away from the car, adrenaline pumping, but as he crosses the green, he realises he's still got the cap on.
So he tosses it into the bushes.
Works for me.
All we need is the "who".
Tell me.
Talk to me.
What is it? Leave me alone.
We've both lost someone we loved.
Oh, how can you say that? How can you compare? He was my only son! Ever since you I think you'd better go.
I want you to know that JUST GO NOW, PLEASE! Hilary Hilary? What's happening? She wants me to leave.
I guess I should.
I'll be back for the funeral.
Stay as long as you wish.
You've been a rock to Ian.
I'm so grateful.
Tom! I've been waiting in the car for ten minutes.
I'm sorry.
We can't be late for Cully's opening night! No.
I was just turning something over in my mind.
Come on.
Come on! Coming! Coming.
THEATRE BELL RINGS New job, eh? Just a bit of cash in hand.
Ian King organised it for me before he That was very decent of him.
I I think I got him wrong.
He is far gone.
Far gone.
Truly in my youth I suffered much extremity for love very much like this.
What do you read, my lord? Words.
Words.
Words.
What is the matter, my lord? Between who? The matter that you read.
Slanders, sir.
Though this be madness, yet there is method in it.
HIS WORDS ECHO IN BARNABY'S HEAD Perhaps there was some method in his madness.
HER WORDS ECHO 'Murder,' though it hath no tongue will speak with most miraculous organ.
I'll have these players play something like the murder of my father HIS WORDS ECHO The play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king.
'The conscience of the king.
' Of the king The king The king.
I say we will have no more marriage! Those that are married already all but one shall live.
The rest shall keep as they are.
Tom! Cully's on.
Oh, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown.
The courtier's, soldier's, scholar's eye, tongue, sword.
The expectancy and rose of the fair state.
Tom! Excuse me.
And the mould of Excuse me! Oh, woe is me to have seen what I have seen.
Where are we going? Belt up and I'll tell you.
Ian King chose Hamlet as the opening production especially for his mother to see.
His mother? Yeah.
Rub her nose in the fact she'd married her husband's brother.
I don't follow, sir.
Hamlet's father was murdered.
And Alan King died on a business trip to China with his brother, Charles.
But that was an accident.
According to the paperwork it was.
But what if Charles killed Alan King, Ian found out about it and Charles had to shut him up? Murdered him? Yeah.
If I'm right, then Hilary King could be in some danger here.
Come on! Come on! David, is Mrs King in? Er, no.
She left about ten minutes ago.
She's taken Charles to hospital.
What happened? He started feeling ill, groggy.
I helped put him in the car.
Is something wrong? Which hospital? I don't know.
Stay here.
If they come back, call me, yes? Sure.
Thank you.
There's no record of Charles being brought to any A&E.
But they've got a trace on his mobile close to Midsomer Magna.
That's the factory - King's Crystal.
Mrs King? Mrs King.
Drop the dagger.
No.
No, Mrs King Please, put the knife down.
Put the knife down.
HE GROANS So Charles began to feel ill.
I'd ground some sleeping tablets into his food.
I persuaded him to go to the hospital.
Instead you took him to the factory.
Yes.
You also took this dagger with you.
Was it your intention to kill Charles? Yes.
Why? Because .
.
he killed my son.
It wasn't you? You didn't sedate Ian in exactly the same way before you killed him? I loved my son.
Charles is your husband.
Yes.
I wish to God I'd My marriage to him made Ian so angry.
So hostile.
It poisoned everything.
Mrs King, your first husband, Alan.
He died during a visit to China, didn't he? His death was accidental - a car crash, yeah? So Charles claimed.
But I'm convinced now Charles killed Alan.
That he lied, deceived me.
All to get control of the company.
And when Ian When Ian found out How did Ian find out? He was clearing out his father's study.
He told me he'd found a sketchbook amongst Alan's things.
A sketchbook? Yes.
Alan had one with him always.
He had one with him in China.
Ian came to me and said he had something awful to tell me.
If only I'd believed him! He would still be alive! BITTER SOBBING Shall we take a break? Sophie Baxter, sir.
Missing persons have tracked down a relative who's suggested a possible location they're following up.
Good.
So you believe Mrs King? Think Charles killed his brother and Ian to get control of the company? Something made her believe it enough to want to kill her own husband.
What if she'd killed her first husband as well? She marries Charles, kills her son, she gets control of the company.
Yeah.
But how could she kill Alan King? He was in China, she was here.
And why would she want to kill Peter Baxter? He was a fly in the ointment? Or he knew too much? She was the one who discovered the body.
If Alan King had a sketchbook in China, the Great Wall and stuff, that would have been returned with the rest of his belongings.
'Hello, Ian.
' 'Looking for me? No, just out for a walk.
' Ah! Found it? Oh.
"Charles and Peter Baxter are stripping the company's assets, "setting up accounts in the Caymans "with some Chinese consortium.
"Whole thing stinks!" My brother was delightful, but completely out of touch with reality.
It was the market that broke King's Crystal, not any malfeasance on my part.
Did you kill him? I loved my brother.
You need to know Hilary.
She's hard as nails.
Gets what she wants.
The rest is window-dressing.
She's as unstable as Ian was.
Ian found that sketchbook later.
That confirmed his suspicions.
You and Baxter had defrauded the company.
Ian had gone to the offices of King's Crystal searching for proof.
The evidence that Peter Baxter himself had come to destroy.
DAGGER CLATTERS What are you doing here? Ian, what are you doing here? Just tell me.
Peter! Let go! Tell me what you're doing here! Peter, stop it! What are you looking for? Peter! What are you looking COMMOTION SOUNDS OF STRUGGLE 'And during a struggle, Peter Baxter was accidentally stabbed.
'Then Ian panicked.
'He bundled the body into the boot of the car.
'He put on Baxter's cap and drove down to the water meadow.
' If all that's true, then Baxter's death has nothing to do with me.
Where were you when Ian died? I was at a Masonic charity do.
Then came home.
And your wife? Hilary was in bed, pretending sleep.
I noticed the light was on in her barn and found Ian there, already dead.
Hilary's told us of a conversation you and she had in the barn earlier that day.
Back in a sec.
I'll give you a hand hanging those up.
Ian has told me something awful.
About Peter Baxter's death.
'Ian had indeed told her something awful.
'He told her that he had killed Peter Baxter.
' And more than that, Hilary said that Ian had told her that he believed that you had killed his father, Alan.
That was her fatal mistake, wasn't it? Because once you heard that, you knew Ian had to be silenced because he was right, wasn't he? You did kill Alan King.
It was an accident.
A car crash.
Look, I'm the one who's the victim here.
It's me she tried to kill.
Only after I told her Ian's death was not suicide.
'Then she knew that everything Ian had told her was true.
'And that you had silenced him.
' Hilary? 'Then, of course, she wanted revenge.
' So that's the line she's been spinning you.
Is that all, or have you got anything more vague? That is what happened, Mr King.
You haven't a shred of evidence for any of your fanciful allegations.
I want my lawyer.
Hilary? I was looking for Hilary.
The police are holding her and Charles.
Why? I don't know.
What happened to you? Where have you been? I couldn't take it any more.
I had to go and see a friend in the north.
Poor Ian! It's just so I still can't believe it.
Last time I saw him, I hated him.
I can't bear that.
All that crazy behaviour, things he said, he was trying to protect you.
Protect me? From the whole mess in his head.
He couldn't bear it.
If it's any comfort, I know he loved you.
Really loved you.
You loved him, too, didn't you? How are bookings for the play, then? Fine, thanks.
Cully I apologise for leaving like that.
It was a work matter.
Something very important.
Of course.
More important than my work, I'm sure.
You completely ruined my entire performance, Dad.
I'm sorry.
Can I give you a lift? No, thanks.
I'll walk.
Do a line run.
Don't want to dry again.
Thanks, Mum.
Leave it, Tom.
She's very stressed.
Well, she's not alone in that.
Do you want a drink? No, thanks.
What is happening? Can you tell me? Yes.
I have a wife and a husband each accusing the other of murder.
Very little evidence, beside my own gut feelings.
Any witnesses? No.
Only victims.
No help there, then.
Unless What? Unless there's a silent witness that could tell us exactly what happened.
Sophie Baxter's turned up in the village.
Has she? Oh, thank God for that.
You can give her a good telling off for leaving the scene of a police investigation.
Big call, sir, digging him up.
But if I'm right, I'm sure his widow will forgive us.
The Consulate papers that were flown back with Alan King's body say that he died as a result of a car crash and subsequent burn-out.
But were they right? I thought so, until I examined the contents of his stomach.
I found significant quantities of finely-ground glass.
Glass? It's a new one on me, too.
So I dug out the books and there it was.
A rare form of poisoning particular to China.
So Alan King was poisoned by Charles and that caused him to crash.
Are you sure? Mm-hmm.
He would have been dead within 20 minutes.
And then I'll take you to a custody suite where you'll be formally charged with the murders of Ian King and Alan King.
Nonsense! That is not true! Oh, Mr King.
Truth is what a jury will believe.
I'm sure they'll be convinced you are as guilty as we know you are.
You're gonna have to admit it, Mr King.
To me, to the court and to yourself.
Don't cut your finger again, sir.
I've got something for you.
It's the one I got when I joined the lodge.
Oh, thank you! No use to me now.
The brotherhood have me down as a traitor.
They slice out traitors' tongues and bury them at low-tide, I believe! I appreciated your trust over the Masons' thing.
Trust, Jones, is something hard to win, easy to lose and never to be taken lightly.
William Shakespeare, sir? No.
Thomas Barnaby.