1:08:01
All right, young woman...
1:08:02
I can give you precisely
one hour and a half from door to door.
1:08:05
No. Miss Hanson said two hours.
1:08:11
Thank you.
1:08:16
- Cigarette?
- Please.
1:08:18
You're being very charming today.
You haven't looked at your watch once.
1:08:22
- That reminds me.
- No, please. Can't you relax for an hour?
1:08:25
An hour? It's just on 3:00.
1:08:29
- You used to say that you hated business.
- Did I?
1:08:32
You know you did.
1:08:33
You were going to whip things into shape
and get out quickly.
1:08:36
That was the original idea.
1:08:37
To save the family and then be off
before they needed more saving.
1:08:41
- In that slow and careful way of yours?
- I began to look into things, yes.
1:08:45
I found that Rainier's
kept other families going, too.
1:08:48
Little families in little homes.
Thousands of them, all over England.
1:08:53
I see. Uncle Atlas, eh?
1:08:57
Don't you ever want to get out
and have fun?
1:09:01
Kitty, the last time I...
1:09:04
It's that woman you sent me,
Lady Maxton.
1:09:06
One of the most interesting cases
I've had...
1:09:08
since I have been in private practice.
1:09:09
Well, goodbye.
1:09:12
Goodbye, Lola, and don't forget
that you're dining with me on Thursday.
1:09:16
Goodbye.
1:09:25
What is it?
1:09:27
Pardon me. It was nothing.
It was just for a moment, that voice...
1:09:30
- Was familiar?
- Not that, exactly...
1:09:32
but it seemed to remind me of something
that I didn't have time to get a grip on.
1:09:38
That happens to me sometimes.
1:09:40
A sort of wisp of memory
that can't be caught before it fades away.
1:09:45
- From those lost years?
- Perhaps.
1:09:49
Now, what were you saying?
1:09:51
That you should take a holiday.
You've got money enough, heaven knows.
1:09:55
- Money, yes, but not the time.
- That's nonsense.
1:09:57
You could make the time.
How old are you?
1:09:59
None of your business.