:28:00
[ ExhaIes sIowIy ]
:28:02
[ Sighs ]
:28:04
Have you taken your medicine?
:28:07
How often is Granny
visiting you?
:28:10
I thought Granny was dead.
:28:12
Very weII, then. How often
do you get the curse?
:28:16
Two or three times.
:28:18
I n a month?
:28:19
Sometimes in a week.
:28:26
Tom's not quite what
I imagined a poet to be.
:28:32
Was he a virgin?
:28:34
[ Laughs ]
He most certainIy was.
:28:36
It can't be easy
for a new husband.
:28:40
No.
:28:43
Have you enough S.T. s?
:28:44
Yes, M ummy -- I have
enough sanitary toweIs
:28:47
to make a patchwork quiIt,
in two coIors.
:28:50
PIease, Vivienne,
try not to be vuIgar.
:28:52
There is never any occasion
for it.
:28:54
Life is quite viIe enough
as it is.
:28:57
[ Sighs ]
:28:59
Oh, it's aII right, M ummy.
:29:02
You don't have to worry
anymore. . .
:29:05
because whatever eIse happens,
I've got Tom.
:29:10
He's mine.
:29:16
And you can't stop it now.
:29:19
[ Tom speaking indistinctIy ]
:29:28
CHARLES : Ah.
A wooden-Iegged man.
:29:32
[ Laughter ]
:29:33
There's aIways
a wooden-Iegged man.
:29:35
M AUR ICE : Wasn't one
in the Iast one?
:29:37
There has been someone eIse,
:29:40
a very abIe
and efficient cIimber.
:29:42
''Doctor, couId you scaIe
this waII?''
:29:47
[ Laughter ]
:29:48
Yes, but not quite the same
:29:50
without that Moriarty chap,
though.
:29:52
Here we are, Vivie.
:29:54
I Iooked out
the open window.
:29:56
The moon shone brightIy
on that angIe of the house.
:29:59
We were a good 60 feet
above the ground,