1:08:01
You came in soon after.
1:08:05
I don't have the keys
to this house.
1:08:08
The doors and windows
haven't been broken into.
1:08:11
He's right. It's perfectly clear.
1:08:13
Someone has been coming in here.
I'm sure of it.
1:08:16
Who else could have stolen
the clippings?
1:08:19
And this someone is involved
in the "alphabet murders."
1:08:22
The "alphabet murders"...
that's why I'm here.
1:08:27
We need to have a long talk.
1:08:30
What do you mean?
Tell us what you know.
1:08:34
It's quite simple.
Ten years ago...
1:08:37
I was a rather influential
newspaper reporter here in Rome.
1:08:42
My professional duty obliged me
to report on the first murder.
1:08:47
It was a woman, a foreigner:
1:08:50
The article was just a few lines
in the local news:
1:08:56
The murder had been preceded
by an anonymous phone call:
1:09:01
The second murder took place
two weeks later: : :
1:09:05
and was identical to the first:
1:09:07
The killer would certainly
strike again:
1:09:10
He had to be found:
1:09:16
The killer was able
to make himself invisible.
1:09:20
He didn't leave even a trace.
1:09:24
I embarked on a kind of race
with the police to discover the truth.
1:09:28
I understand perfectly.
1:09:30
Sorry.
1:09:32
I was convinced that the killer
was a pervert...
1:09:36
and I argued this theory
in many articles...
1:09:40
always accusing the police
of incompetence.
1:09:45
Until, one night, Emily Craven
was murdered.
1:09:50
They found her right outside,
with a knife in her back:
1:09:54
She lived in this house
with her sister, Laura: : :
1:09:56
the woman who invited you
to stay here:
1:09:59
During my investigation
of that murder: : :