:49:03
They come along,
they sit beside you in your car.
:49:09
Only, the funny thing is,
it's never happened before.
:49:13
- That's crazy to say.
- You're the one that's mixed up.
:49:17
- But I'm not mixed up.
- Get back in my pocket.
:49:26
Do me a favour, park it for a while.
I'd like to be alone with the lady.
:49:32
Careful, I'm the marrying type.
:49:35
When you worked for Martinelli,
did he take stuff home...
:49:39
...briefcase, papers or did he
leave them locked up in his office?
:49:44
I don't know, except he kept
my contract in his office. Why?
:49:48
Last night, Louis the bar man had
a letter for me that Johnny gave him.
:49:53
- What did it say?
- I don't know. Martinelli got it.
:49:58
- How do you know?
- When your phone call woke me up...
:50:02
...Louis was in my room,
lying on the other bed...
:50:05
...with a broken neck.
:50:08
- Oh, Rip.
- Yeah.
:50:11
I'm a guy that likes
to get his mail.
:50:14
Martinelli would have destroyed it
by now.
:50:17
No, he'd want to read it first.
:50:19
Johnny would have written it in code.
:50:22
My guess is, he's still trying
to figure it out. I'm going after it.
:50:27
- Not back there?
- Yeah.
:50:30
I just had my friend Baretto
on the phone.
:50:33
He gave me the name of a safe expert.
:50:36
He was so good the law
took a little slice out of his life.
:50:39
- He's retired. Lives in this town.
- What good is...?
:50:43
I don't think Johnny
killed your husband.
:50:46
- Why?
- I knew him like my own birthmark.
:50:50
Rip, there's something
I didn't tell the coroner...
:50:54
...because Johnny wouldn't let me.
:50:57
I was right there when it happened.