:27:00
I'd like some coffee,
Jennings.
:27:03
There it is.
:27:05
- You haven't made a lot of friends.
- Ah.
:27:08
Good. Good morning, ladies, gents.
:27:12
Um, I wonder--
Excuse me.
:27:15
Uh, will Lady Sylvia
be coming down soon?
:27:18
I shouldn't think so.
She has breakfast in her room.
:27:21
Then she usually goes
for a ride.
:27:24
Yes, but she won't be doing that
this morning, will she?
:27:28
Well, I see.
:27:32
Well, in that case,
I wonder, Lady Trentham,
:27:36
if you would be kind enough
to join us for some questions.
:27:40
If you wish, Inspector.
:27:42
I'm afraid I won't be
much help,
:27:45
but I suppose on a day like this
we all have to pull our weight.
:27:48
Mr. Denton made
a right chump out of Mr. Jennings.
:27:51
Never mind that.
:27:53
Did you hear about Sir William?
Apparently he wasn't stabbed after all.
:27:57
Well, I mean, he was,
but that's not why he died.
:28:00
He was poisoned.
:28:02
That's what killed him.
:28:04
The inspector
told Mrs. Croft.
:28:06
They don't know why the killer
stabbed him as well,
but he must've been dead already.
:28:10
That's why
there was no blood.
:28:13
Dead bodies don't bleed,
you know.
:28:15
Trust Sir William
to be murdered twice.
:28:20
Of course
he wasn't murdered.
:28:22
Not that sort of murder.
:28:25
Some ruffian broke in...
:28:27
thinking the library
was empty.
:28:29
Sir William surprised him
and paid the price for it.
:28:33
And very tragic it is too.
:28:35
I can't see that,
Mr. Jennings.
:28:37
I don't think ruffians
go about poisoning people
and then stabbing the corpses.
:28:41
Apart from
anything else,
:28:43
they're usually in a hurry
to get away, aren't they?
:28:45
What are you suggesting?
:28:47
- I'm not suggesting anything.
It's just--
- Just what?
:28:50
Well, it looks to me like Sir William
was killed deliberately, that's all.
:28:54
No wonder they're not
letting any of us go.
:28:57
Tough luck on whoever's
got any secrets to hide.