:30:07
Oh, Ramsley.
lt's you.
:30:09
May l help you?
:30:11
Yes.
:30:12
l was just looking
for my husband.
:30:14
Ah, indeed.
:30:16
l left him in the library.
:30:19
Right through there.
:30:23
Honey, it's late.
Let's not fight anymore.
:30:26
Come to bed?
:30:28
Oh !
l'm sorry.
:30:30
l thought you were my husband.
:30:31
Can l help you with that?
:30:33
Ramsley hates it
when l leave things lying about.
:30:35
Yes.
He seems a bit proper.
:30:38
He strikes most people that way.
:30:40
Once you get to know him ,
you'll find that's not the case.
:30:42
But he's really...
:30:46
He's really very sweet.
:30:48
Thank you.
:30:50
He's been like a father to me.
:30:52
Mr. Gracey,
may l ask you something?
:30:56
Yes. Of course.
Anything.
:30:58
This house.
:31:00
lt's been in your family
for generations.
:31:02
lt's your home.
:31:04
Why do you want to sell it?
:31:08
These walls are filled
with so many memories.
:31:13
Some of them painful.
:31:19
l think for you to understand ,
l really must show you.
:31:25
lt's all right.
There's nothing to be afraid of.
:31:31
Although it might be
a bit worn and faded
:31:33
from its original grandeur,
:31:35
this house was once filled
with so many things.
:31:38
So much life.
:31:39
With grand parties, dancing,
laughter, and, above all, hope.
:31:45
Being a Gracey meant
that you were denied nothing.
:31:48
The world was yours.
:31:49
What happened here, Mr. Gracey?
:31:52
She did.
:31:53
Who?
:31:55
Elizabeth.
:31:57
Hers is the story
that haunts these walls.