:41:00
I want you to leave June alone.
:41:02
We don't know who you are
or where you come from.
:41:05
- What do you do?
- Nothing.
:41:08
That's frank, at least.
:41:09
I'm sure you'll be interested to know
I have no bank account, either.
:41:13
I thought so.
:41:14
Your hand is showing, Miss Mills.
:41:16
You've got a trump card: Money.
:41:18
- And because I haven't any, you...
- It has nothing to do with money.
:41:22
June has quite enough,
even without my share.
:41:25
Your share?
:41:26
Yes, she'll get that too. I want her
to be happy, that's all I care about.
:41:30
It's all hers, whatever I have.
:41:33
In San Francisco, Mr Stanton,
where no-one can touch it.
:41:38
Not until she meets the right man.
:41:40
Well, maybe I'm not
the right man after all.
:41:44
And you won't see her again?
:41:46
Suppose we leave that up
to the one concerned.
:42:03
- There you are.
- Thank you.
:42:10
Wonderful. Just wonderful.
:42:12
If I've accomplished nothing else,
:42:14
at least I've made you like
one of the little things I like.
:42:17
I have my little secrets, too.
:42:21
Bet you think all I do is read
big, heavy books, don't you?
:42:24
But I don't.
:42:26
For years, I've been saving
ads out of magazines.
:42:29
Sometimes, I...
:42:31
I feel like I'm the girl in the ads,
:42:34
softly alluring, full of grace,
:42:37
gowned by Schiaparelli.
:42:38
If I had money,
I'd dress you like the ads.
:42:41
Take you to New York,
at least to San Francisco.
:42:43
You'd have that Schiaparelli gown.
:42:46
It isn't that important.
:42:48
It would be when I took you
to the nightclubs, the theatre.
:42:51
The concerts. D'you ever hear
the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra?
:42:54
Mm-hm. On the radio.
:42:56
Whaddya hear on the radio?
A lot of noise.
:42:58
But when you see 'em up on the stage,