:57:15
Useless.
:57:16
Quite useless,
I assure you.
:57:22
There's nothing
written on the floor.
:57:25
It was just a
rouse of mine
:57:26
to bring Brunton's
murderer here.
:57:28
Permit me.
:57:30
As the most ruthless
killer in England
:57:31
you deserve some
of the light.
:57:33
Killer, I?
:57:34
Oh I say, you
seem to forget
:57:36
that my life was
also attempted.
:57:38
And a very neat
trick it was
:57:40
to divert suspicion
from yourself
:57:42
but it struck
me as odd
:57:43
that the man who
murdered both Musgraves
:57:45
with such a sure hand
:57:47
should have missed
so badly in your case
:57:49
unless of course, um,
:57:50
you yourself were
the murderer.
:57:53
Ahh, that's ridiculous.
:57:54
Then too it seemed curious
:57:58
that you a doctor
:58:00
examining both bodies
:58:02
and failed to report
the real cause of death.
:58:05
And that was?
:58:07
A sustural needle thrust
up into the brain
:58:09
between the base
of the skull
:58:11
and the cervical
vertebrate.
:58:12
I had the unpleasant duty
:58:13
of removing this
piece of a needle
:58:15
from Phillip
Musgrave's head.
:58:17
It couldn't be yours by
any chance, could it?
:58:19
I never owned one.
:58:20
Oh yes you did.
:58:22
I saw it in your case
:58:25
the night I came
into this house
:58:28
just after
Geoffrey Musgrave
:58:30
was found murdered.
:58:32
It wasn't broken then.
:58:34
It was only when you
killed Phillip Musgrave
:58:35
that you lost
a piece of it.
:58:37
Nonsense.
:58:38
Why should I go around
:58:39
sticking needles
into people?
:58:40
A fair enough
question, doctor.
:58:42
Among nice people
:58:43
murder like matrimony
:58:44
generally has a motive
:58:46
and in this case the
motive was matrimony.
:58:49
Oh you mean Miss Sally?
:58:51
I do.
:58:52
Oh I see so you think
:58:53
it's a case of
murder for profit.
:58:54
Precisely.
:58:56
My dear Holmes.
:58:57
That won't do.
:58:58
The Musgraves
are lamb poor.
:58:59
Everybody knows that.