:40:01
The bottom drawer, the trousseau drawer ?
:40:05
Ah, the frillies !
Take 'em out ! Vandalize them !
:40:10
Come on, Milo. You're a burglar,
not a Lady's maid.
:40:14
Don't pack them. Ravage them !
Come on, Milo !
:40:20
Oh, excellent. Now tear that.
That's better !
:40:24
Now, where would Milady hide the trophies
of her skilled accomplishments, hmm ?
:40:29
Her rubies, emeralds, diamonds, sapphires...
:40:33
Interleaved among her
lace-edged underclothes,
:40:36
Stuffed into the false bottoms of hat boxes,
:40:40
Sewn into the hems of always
the latest, had-to-have,
:40:45
at-once-discarded Parisian dresses.
:40:47
Or perhaps secretly...
:40:49
concealed in the back of this.
:40:53
What better safe deposit for deceit, hmm ?
:40:55
How often has it reflected
the bright eyes that betray ?
:40:59
The mouth that lied
and kissed and lied again !
:41:03
I thought it was me who was supposed
to be doing the ravaging.
:41:07
So it was, so it was.
Merely demonstrating, I was.
:41:10
- Be a good fellow. Stamp on that, will you ?
- Why me ?
:41:14
I'm afraid if I broke it, I'd get
seven more years of Marguerite.
:41:19
Thank you.
:41:27
- Now where's your bedroom ?
- M-mine ?
:41:30
- It's my turn to demonstrate.
- Oh, my dear Milo.
:41:33
Having failed to find the jewels among
the Lady's personal possessions--
:41:36
Be a bit suspicious-- a professional
burglar playing favorites.
:41:39
On the contrary. An intelligent
burglar would immediately look...
:41:43
for the next-most-likely hiding place.
- Which is where ?
:41:45
The inevitable safe. Just blow it
open and steal what's in it.
:41:49
Come on, Milo.
:41:52
Right.