:26:04
The world may not be able to produce
enough food to feed all these people.
:26:07
Now perhaps you'll understand
what an inexpensive nutrient will mean.
:26:13
Well, not many of us look that far
into the future, sir.
:26:16
Our business is the future.
:26:18
No man can do it on his own, of course.
:26:20
You don't pull it out of your hat
like a magician's rabbit.
:26:24
Well, you build on what hundreds of others
have learnt before you.
:26:29
I thought that synthesis was impossible
without a bonding agent...
:26:32
to hold everything together.
:26:35
And we use the simplest of all: the atom.
:26:38
Let me show you.
:26:48
That's an isotope, isn't it?
A radioactive isotope.
:26:51
Ammoniac.
:26:52
- And that's what binds your solution?
- Binds it and triggers it.
:26:56
Using it, Eric's dream and mine
may be a reality before...
:27:02
Excuse me.
:27:08
Hello?
:27:11
Yes.
:27:13
It's for you, Doctor.
:27:16
Thank you.
:27:20
Hello? Hi, Josh.
:27:23
Of course.
:27:24
Call her back.
Tell her I'll stop by on my way home.
:27:27
Bye.
:27:29
Sorry to break this up.
:27:32
Thanks for the tour, Professor.
:27:33
Maybe one of these days
you'll invite me back.
:27:35
Why, yes, of course.
:27:37
Professor, I...
:27:40
I'm still puzzled by the speed with which
Jacobs' malformation developed.
:27:43
Can you explain it?
:27:44
Eric is dead and he shouldn't be.
:27:47
But the cause was acromegalia.
Nothing else.
:27:50
It seems such a deviation
from the classic cases.
:27:53
You're being very diplomatic, Doctor.
Why don't you speak up?
:27:57
Don't you think, sir,
this time you might be wrong?