:30:02
Well, it's about the same thing.
:30:07
Were you there at the end?
In Madrid, I mean.
:30:12
After I came back,
I wrote a series of articles...
:30:16
...which finally blossomed
into a regular column.
:30:20
And I've lived happily ever after.
:30:24
Did you live happily ever before?
:30:27
How do you mean?
:30:30
Well, I wanna know the story,
you know, behind the story.
:30:34
The girl without a country
and how she grew up.
:30:37
She grew up by remote control.
:30:39
I've read Uncle Tom
in the Argentine and...
:30:44
The Argentine.
:30:46
Argentine.
:30:47
And I read Huckleberry Finn
going down the Yangtze.
:30:52
- Did it seem like the Mississippi?
- I've never seen the Mississippi.
:30:59
So then I grew older, and I went
to school in Switzerland...
:31:04
...and in Leipzig and the Sorbonne,
and then I became quite busy...
:31:08
...and my father decided to come home.
So I decided to come home with him.
:31:13
That isn't when you came home.
:31:17
I was there the day you came home.
It was in the ballpark.
:31:21
- That was fun.
- Yeah.
:31:23
Fun being with the people
instead of telling them, wasn't it?
:31:26
I had a kind of an idea that it had
something to do with being with you.
:31:30
With me? Really? Why?
:31:32
- Look, Sam...
- I'm looking.
:31:37
What do you see?
:31:39
- Right now?
- Right now.
:31:42
A little gal I ran into at the ballpark,
name of Tessie.
:31:46
I know you by the freckles
on your nose.
:31:48
You're the first to mention
those since I was 12.
:31:51
You mind? Trouble is, you can't
see them most of the time.
:31:54
Maybe you bring them out.
:31:57
Look, Tess...