Murder on the Orient Express
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1:10:02
What's his name?
1:10:04
Au contraire, Madame la Princesse,
it is I who wish to make a confession.

1:10:08
You pay me the compliment
of having read about me,

1:10:10
I return the compliment
1:10:12
by admitting that
I have read about you.

1:10:16
Continue.
1:10:18
I have been accidentally reminded
1:10:20
that you were the godmother
of Mrs. Armstrong,

1:10:22
who was herself the mother
of the kidnapped child, Daisy.

1:10:25
How did you become Mrs. Armstrong's
godmother, madame?

1:10:28
I was the friend and admirer
of her mother,

1:10:32
the great American actress,
Linda Arden.

1:10:35
Why did you bring these daggers
from the place?

1:10:38
Is that a quotation or a question?
1:10:41
A quotation. I saw her twice
as Lady Macbeth in London.

1:10:45
She was the greatest
tragic actress of her day.

1:10:51
Was? Surely she is still alive,
madame?

1:10:52
Alive, but bedridden.
1:10:57
Did she not have a second daughter,
younger than Mrs. Armstrong?

1:11:01
There was,
but I do not recall her name.

1:11:03
When I paid a visit,
she was always away at school.

1:11:06
What became of
the younger daughter?

1:11:09
She married a Turk or some such.
We never spoke of it.

1:11:14
What was Mrs. Armstrong's
maiden name?

1:11:17
Mrs. Armstrong's
maiden name was

1:11:21
Greenwood.
1:11:23
May I tax your memory and,
indeed, your patience a little longer?

1:11:27
There are other names
in the Armstrong household

1:11:30
that I cannot recall.
Was there not a secretary?

1:11:33
Of course there was a secretary.
1:11:35
Her name, madame?
1:11:36
Her name.
1:11:39
Oh, my memor...
1:11:42
She was a Miss Freebody.
1:11:45
Was there not a gallant chauffeur?
1:11:47
There was.
1:11:48
I never used him. I had my own.
1:11:51
Surely he was not
the only male servant?

1:11:54
I seem to remember one other there.
1:11:56
He was, I think you would say,
1:11:58
the colonel's Indian orderly.

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