:09:00
That woman's made a mockery
of my one and only murder.
:09:08
No! No! No, Mr Swanbridge!
:09:12
You mustn't turn your back
on the audience.
:09:14
I want them to see
the surprise on your face.
:09:18
Allow me.
:09:19
Just once more, Miss Rusty, please.
:09:24
Right.
:09:32
Ah, our lady president.
:09:35
Carry on, please.
:09:37
Try again.
:09:39
Do please try harder, Mr Swanbridge.
:09:42
My arm's getting awfully tired.
:09:44
A little rough at the moment,
but it'll be all right on the night.
:09:49
- Tea?
- No, thank you.
:09:52
You found him guilty, of course.
:09:54
They did. I did not.
:09:57
Miss Marple, surely...
:09:59
Remember our play for the renovation
fund, The Lodger's Dilemma?
:10:04
Unforgettable.
:10:05
You remember, Mr Stringer,
that the victim in that play
:10:09
wore a rose to receive her paramour.
:10:11
He murdered her
and the lodger was blamed.
:10:13
Exactly. Mrs McGinty
wore a rose on the fatal night.
:10:18
Oh!
:10:19
Was it to receive her lodger
:10:21
when we have no evidence
of any dalliance between them?
:10:25
- I hardly think so.
- Then she wore it for someone else.
:10:30
- Her murderer, you think?
- I do.
:10:33
Excuse me, Mr Stringer.
:10:35
I'm sorry, but he still keeps
turning away. What can I do?
:10:38
We'll have to recast him.
:10:40
I know, ask the vicar if
he'll be kind enough to have a try.
:10:44
Yes.
:10:46
If what you say is so, then an
innocent man's life may be at stake.
:10:51
What can be done?
:10:53
We can begin by inquiring
rather more closely
:10:55
into the private life of Mrs McGinty
than the police have seen fit to do.
:10:59
Yes, but how?