"JENNIFER EIGHT" A Policeman's Story by Bruce Robinson June 1991 1: INT. COMMUNITY HALL. DAY. The Church of St. Peter Los Angeles. "WHOEVER YOU SEE HERE - WHATEVER YOU HEAR HERE - STAYS HERE." That's a notice on a wall. Here's another notice "NO SMOKING." Everyone is smok- ing. This is an AA meeting. There's a lot of Faces to look at. I don't know when we'll get to the one that's talking, but when we do it's like this. Eyes like glue. 50 years old with a face the color of a snuff-users hanky. He says this: BENNY .. after my third recovery my wife made me swear I'd never bring another bottle into the house. And I never did. I bur- ied it under the lawn. Cut out a turf & stood it upright with a piece of tin- foil instead of a cork. So here we are out in the yard, and she's happy because I'm getting healthy in a pair of swim- ing shorts & no way near no booze. She decides to prune the roses. Meanwhile, I'm laying there with a straw stuck in- to the fucken lawn doing a quart of red .. Curious thing about drunks. Their disease often amuses them. That's how crazy I was - I was sick for half a life till I finally found my san- ity again in these rooms. Don't take that drink - And for the one or two new faces I see here, I say this: just do it by the day. You gotta do it by the day - Don't take that drink. And keep coming to these meetings. Because here is where it works .. CHAIR Thank you, Benny .. We have a few more minutes .. Anyone else like to share? .. Ash into an ashtray and now a face. He's around 40 years old. Intense eyes & dark hair. Probably good looking when the ang- le's right. But this is a bad angle. His name is JOHN BERLIN. BERLIN My name's John .. and I'm an alcoholic .. ALL Hi, John. BERLIN I didn't intend to speak today. Matter of fact, I wasn't gonna come to the meeting .. But I wanna say a couple of things I hope may be of use, particularly as Benny says, to the new faces here. I first came into this fellowship ten months ago. I came to a meeting I was convinced was gonna be my last - how could a buncha drunks help me? - Then someone got up, I think it was Micky, and described himself as "the shit around which the universe revolved." I don't know if that was original to him - it doesn't matter, it was the first time I'd heard it, and I still can't think of a better way to describe how I felt - We all have our own place in the darkness, and I was in such a mess I could hardly fucken see - I'd lost someone very dear to me - she hadn't died - I had - I don't know whether she left coza the drinking, or whether I drank coz I knew she was gonna leave - either way, the booze won - I replaced her with alcohol & anger - I was angry with her, myself, everyone and everything - Where I was I wanted to be someplace else - any place but here - any moment but now - But here I am, and it is now, and there's a big change about to hap- pen in my life - and I'm going for it coz this time I know I'm not running away - I'm actually two miles into a 600 mile journey, and I feel good about myself going there - So I stopped off to share that with you - and to thank everyone of you, and everyone in this fellowship for letting me walk out of here, free .. 2: EXT. OAKLAND BRIDGE. SAN FRANCISCO BAY. DUSK. High above the Golden Gate. Too high for specifics. But there is something down there of interest to the Camera. Descending with the Music it seems to isolate a particular car. Too many and too distant to know which it is. But the Camera is follow- ing and already a mile up the 101 Interstate travelling north. Maybe via a dissolve. And maybe not. But red and white either way as the headlights are coming on. The Camera is closing on the highway. And a car has definitely been selected. There is nothing much of interest about it. It's a blue Mercedes sedan. Mussorgsky will choreograph the pace of these cuts. The first puts the frame directly in front of the car. In a few moments its brights snap up. And Titles continue in a dazzle of light. 3: INT. MERCEDES SEDAN. 101. DUSK. Nobody in the car except BERLIN. And a lot of cigarette smoke. Just time to wedge in a P.O.V. There's an intersection coming up. He hits the indicators and crosses lanes winding his wind- ow down. Takes a last hit at his cigarette and exits the butt. 4: EXT. FREEWAY INTERSECTION. DUSK. An instant of red as the cigarette shatters up the highway. A heavy sky of red and black cloud. The Mercedes turns off head- ing east. This time the Camera doesn't follow. Remains static over the intersection until the tail lights finally disappear. 5: INT. LIVING ROOM. HOUSE. DAWN. Bare wooden boards and the sound of singing birds. This house hasn't been lived in for years. No furniture other than a new mattress in the middle of the floor. Still in polythene wraps. BERLIN just about awake on top of it. Ten seconds of disorien- tation while he puts this together. A stone fireplace. Stairs leading to what's got to be a tiny room above. With enough ef- fort this place could be charming. But right now it's a wreck. 6: INT. KITCHEN. HOUSE. DAWN. This kitchen was out of date by 1963. A huge china sink and a fat fridge. But the cooker works and a battered old kettle is already on the gas. T-shirt and instant coffee. BERLIN checks cupboards out. Crockery includes a cup and that'll do for now. His lips articulate a silent expletive. The gas has just gone out. Tries to relight it without success. On hands & knees he explores a rubber supply pipe that snakes under the back door. 7: EXT. OPEN END GARAGE AND YARD. HOUSE. DAWN. In the garage he finds the gas cylinder. Empty and so is the bastard with it. He drags fingers through hair in frustration. Looks around at the heaps of crap that need clearing out. The view beyond he hardly cares to look at. But if he does it is as follows. Clouds massing on the horizon. Fields getting re- ady for rain. His nearest neighbor is around 200 yards away. His nearest Cow about 50. This house is remote and rural look- ing with a veranda out back. But BERLIN has no inclination for sight-seeing. As he walks away a dreary female Voice seeps in. 8: INT. LIVING ROOM/KITCHEN. HOUSE. DAWN. The Voice comes via a police scanner. Most of this dialogue's bullshit. Illegally parked autos and a few drunks still about. BERLIN sits on the mattress eating a breakfast of chewing gum and milk. He unwraps another Juicy Fruit and regrets it. Goes round his mouth like a shoe in a washing machine. A reluctant decision is taken. Spits gum at the sink as he arrives in the kitchen. Starts unloading his leather bag. A flotsam of stuff is excavated including a 9mm Beretta and a pack of cigarettes. He lights up and takes a cruel hit full of nicotine and guilt. Wouldn't need a clairvoyant to realize he's trying to give up. Something on the scanner interests him and he wanders back to the living room. There's a call going out for "David 72 Sam 3." David 72 acknowledges and BERLIN clearly recognizes the voice. "We have a 927D/ Springfield Street/ City Dump." But David 72 is already hired. "I'm outside Emersons/ I wanna be the first horrible face of her day." BERLIN exhales through a smile. The Controller needs an E.T.A. for the 927? David 72 doesn't know. Advises her to roll a couple of cars and "Secure the location." 9: EXT. HILLSIDE. SPRINGFIELD STREET. EUREKA. DAY. A Chevrolet zig-zags up a shabby canyon. It's the road to the city dump. Its final bend reveals a line of bellowing garbage trucks. Everything is backed up. Nothing moves except the car. The cause of the hold-up is explained at the top. A Sheriff's car blocks the road. A Uniform moves to wave the Chevrolet in. 10: EXT. ENTRANCE/TRACK/INFILL. CITY DUMP. EUREKA. DAY. The car parks at a weigh-house and a man in his 50's gets out. Looks like he hasn't slept in a while. And got the mood to go with it. Sports jacket and cowboy boots. A lot of laugh lines around the eyes. But you wouldn't want to get arrested by him. And especially not this morning. His name is FREDERICK T ROSS. TRAVIS You can drive down there, Sir .. ROSS I'm already walking. Where is it? One of those walking with him is a 10-year-old Kid with a Dog. TRAVIS looks almost too young to own his struggling moustache. TRAVIS On the infill. The guy from L.A.'s just gone down there .. ROSS He has? .. What's he doing here? TRAVIS He was waiting for you, Sir. Wait- ed a good while. Said he'd go down and take a look. I hope that's O.K. The track sinks through a valley of a million discarded tires. ROSS Damn A, it's O.K. With a bit of luck I'm goin home. What we got? TRAVIS A derelict. TRIMBLE They cut his throat .. The information comes from freckles and a missing front tooth. ROSS Who are you? TRIMBLE Trimble. He wears glasses and wields a rusty .22 pump-action Remington. ROSS Where do you fit in, Trimble? TRAVIS His father's the manager, Sir. The kid was up there shooting vermin, and he found the body. TRIMBLE Get ready for it, coz I'm tell- ing ya, you're in for a shock .. TRIMBLE speaks with some enthusiasm. ROSS looks back with none. They slit him from "ear to ear." Ya want me to make a statement? ROSS Not right now. No. Thank you. 11: EXT. WORKING FACE. INFILL. GARBAGE DUMP. DAY. A series of terraces have been created as the canyon fills up. Black smoke drifts from a distance at will of the wind. Gulls and bulldozers. Plus a stinking ten foot cliff of human filth. Several cars parked here including the blue Mercedes. Several On Lookers behind yellow police tape. ROSS negotiates it look- ing pissed off. Looks up and somewhere in the smoke is BERLIN. ROSS Did you bring it with you? BERLIN I hope I'm not intruding? ROSS Be my guest. What you got? BERLIN Old guy, offed himself with a knife. I can't find the knife. And the next thing ROSS is looking at is a death in the trash. A massive dozer in the background. Everything else is garbage. TRIMBLE They cut his throat. ROSS Would you get outside the tape. And tell your dad to put that fire out ... that ain't legal ... Another face here is so familiar ROSS hasn't bothered to ackn- owledge it. BLATTIS is a 32 year old local newspaper reporter. Little is visible of the body except a blood-stained raincoat. TRAVIS I wonder what would make him do a thing like that? ROSS Don't annoy me, Travis. TRAVIS No, Sir. Truck horns wail in the distance. On the horizon it's thunder. ROSS So where's the knife? BERLIN wears surgical gloves. Removes film from a small camera. BERLIN I dunno .. Guess the dozer musta shifted him? You need some hands up here to look .. ROSS You heard. Look for the knife. Swatting smoke ROSS directs anger at a fat cop called VENABLES. You, too .. Move that ass .. BERLIN hands the film to ROSS as he gets into identical gloves. You done the pockets? BERLIN No, Sir. I haven't started till Monday. I'm a "tourist." ROSS "Welcome to Eureka." By now ROSS is crouched next to the Corpse examining the wound. How long's he been feeling like this? BERLIN Week or two. Musta been on the ker- osene. Stinks like a diesel engine. BLATTIS Fucken noddle's hanging off .. ROSS Mr Blattis, of our local news- paper. You sure it's a suicide? BERLIN Uh huh .. He's well rehearsed .. BLATTIS What does that mean, Sergeant? BERLIN Cut your own throat, you're ner- vous about it, tend to hesitate. He's got three trial cuts, lower left side of the neck, before he works up courage for the big one. BLATTIS looks vaguely impressed. ROSS begins searching pockets. BLATTIS You think Popeye would know that? ROSS I don't think Popeye would be here. VENABLES (V.O.) Dead dog over here, Sir ... ROSS Find the knife. And Venab- les, is the coroner called? VENABLES Yes, Sir .. He's delayed .. BLATTIS Alright, gentlemen, I'm gonna leave you. I got a couple of questions for the paper, Serg- eant? Mind if I swing by later, wring out a tea-bag with you? BERLIN My pleasure .. Who's Popeye? BLATTIS Your predecessor. He did- n't like to get outta bed. Catch you later, Freddy T .. Off he fucks under an ailing sky. BERLIN lands a friendly grin. BERLIN So what happened to the barbecues, and fishing? ROSS Watch my lips, coz you're not gonna believe this - this is a rare occurrence. We haven't had a body in eighteen months. He finds keys and change and a sandwich in the Wino's raincoat. How does anyone dead as this lose a knife? BERLIN What about that kid, Ross? ROSS Oh, shit. Of course. The kid. (Stands to shout) Travis. Find that kid and get the knife off him. He's gonna lie to you - but he's got it - so get it. Well, go on, get on with it. Whatta you staring at? TRAVIS stares up like he just stuck his dick in a light socket. TRAVIS I think I found some- thing horrible, Sir ROSS Whatta you mean, "horrible?" TRAVIS I think I've found a hand. 12: EXT. INFILL. GARBAGE DUMP. DAY. ROSS crouches in garbage. Peers into a trash sack with assist- ance of a flashlight. "You're right. It's a fucken hand." Pas- ses the light to BERLIN. His turn to examine the ruptured bag. BERLIN Looks like a woman's hand? BERLIN finally stands. Offs the flashlight. And hands it back. ROSS What do you think? BERLIN I think you're here all day. 13: EXT. INFILL. GARBAGE DUMP. DAY. Pissing with rain and unspeakably miserable. The 'grid-search' is in progress and 50 square yards of the dump have been ripp- ed to pieces. Intermittent voices from police radios. More veh- icles down below including an ambulance with hazards revolving. Up here half a dozen arc-lights scald off vapor. BERLIN search- es under a busted umbrella. Looks up and runs into ROSS's eyes. ROSS How much longer we here? We're not gonna find nothing else .. ? He wears a rubber cape & looks like a huge pissed-off Napoleon. BERLIN We give it one more hour. Did the photographer do the dogs? ROSS The dogs? BERLIN Two dogs. He should do the dogs. And both turn towards a Voice shouting from deep in the gloom. VENABLES Sergeant - we got a brassiere over here. Looks like it could be blood. ROSS Oh, shit. BERLIN Alright, I'm coming .. Another intrusion from the radio. TRAVIS repeats the question. TRAVIS The coroner wants to know if we can release the derelict? ROSS Ask him. BERLIN Yeah, he can go ... ROSS Think I'll lay down with him. Only way I'll get outta here. Did someone say something funny? Does BERLIN just about smile. BERLIN It's good to be with you, Ross. And this is probably the only time ROSS will look happy today. ROSS Glad you finally made it, Bro ... 14: EXT. CAR PARK. POLICE STATION. CITY OF EUREKA. DAY. The Mercedes descends an incline and parks. Brown Chevys and black & white patrol cars. Dismal lights and raining like it doesn't end. BERLIN gets out and unloads the trunk (aquarium & insulated picnic box). Slams the trunk and reveals BLATTIS. BLATTIS You want some umbrella? Proffers a big yellow one plus assistance carrying equipment. BERLIN Is this normal? BLATTIS Average rainfall, 48 inches. Pisses down, October to June. Raining hard enough to hurt. A brisk intimacy across the lot. Better in the summer. You get to fucka few tourists .. He hits a security code at the door. Obviously familiar with the station. Dialogue continues as they step into a corridor. 15: INT. CORRIDOR/ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. BLATTIS [BERLIN] Not married are you, Sergeant? [No.] That's good, you get to fuck a few more. So how long you known Freddy? BERLIN Freddy? Forever - he was my serg- eant when I was a kid - don't get to see a lot of each other - but we been buddies two hundred years .. BLATTIS Did he get you the job? BERLIN I think he would have if he could have - been trying to get me up here long enough - I think he may have bribed the old guy to retire .. BLATTIS Popeye wasn't old. Younger than you. They push through doors into the biggest room in the building. A dozen desks back to back and all the clutter and clatter of typewriters and paperwork and Secretaries swapping the gossip. Too many cops to describe and no time to remember them anyway. But here's one making introductions. About 60 years old. Face a mix of brick and fat. The Chief of Eureka Police is CITRINE. CITRINE Sergeants Serato, and Taylor. Any handshakes and greetings that fit in around the equipment. Mr Travis, I think you know .. BERLIN Do me a favor, Travis? Bring in the resta the stuff from my car? BLATTIS tosses his parasol "Don't lose it" and follows BERLIN. BLATTIS Did you find the knife, Sergeant? BERLIN No .. But we have a theory .. BLATTIS Kid told me he didn't take it? BERLIN Maybe he's lying to you? By now they're in an L shaped room with wood benches and bull- etin board all over the walls. Bullshit everywhere in packing cases. Dusty Playboy spreads amongst other junk on the boards. BLATTIS Is it true you found a hand? And he benches the aquarium as BERLIN loses the insulated box. Is that it? CITRINE (O.S.) Interview over, Blattis ... BLATTIS C'mon, Chief, if it's sensitive, tell me .. I'm not taking notes .. Right now the box contains camera equipment which is unpacked. CITRINE .. we got a body part. We don't know what it is - probably some kind of hospital debris - we're gonna try and check it out. O.K. Now you know as much as we do .. BLATTIS Grateful for your candor, Sir. CITRINE Then do me a favor, and keep this outta the newspaper - that dump serves a dozen different communities, we don't even know if it's ours? Till we do I don't want no one worrying about .. BLATTIS Wasn't frozen, was it, Sergeant? CITRINE Come on, Michael, outta here, the guys trying to move in. I told you what we know, something else, you- 'll be the first to hear about it .. A Woman's face around the door. "Los Angeles for Sergeant Ber- lin." And goodbye BLATTIS as Berlin reaches for the telephone. BERLIN Why did he ask if it was frozen? CITRINE That, I couldn't tell you .. And don't worry about anya this crap, by the time you're back it's gone .. CITRINE splits as BERLIN picks up "Hey, Ronzo, good of you to call." A long phone lead and he continues to unpack equipment. BERLIN (Phone) Listen, my time isn't good - but two things - really important - the bras- siere I sent you? - I need to know if those stains are human blood - and if they are, do they match the blood in the sample? - C'mon, gimme a break, I don't know anyone up here, it would take two weeks - C'mon, Ronny, I'm ask- ing nice? I really need to know wheth- er I'm interested in that brassiere? .. A cut-out of Popeye The Sailor with fist round a camera on the wall. Telephone resistance is collapsing and he breaks a smile. You're my favourite man - raining - I gotta go - Ronny - I gotta go - I got a house fulla removal men and a date at the morgue - And, Ron, Con- gratulations - you're my first call .. 16: INT. MORGUE. COUNTY HOSPITAL. EUREKA. DAY. ROSS has a Vic inhaler up his nostril. An inadequate defense. A sudden stink slams into his neck muscles. Head and inhaler travel rearward. He shifts eyes to BERLIN who scans the Bum's autopsy reports. A PATHOLOGIST comments on his handiwork into a microphone hanging from the ceiling. "Except as previously noted, the liver is not remarkable." ROSS doesn't believe it. PATHOLOGIST .. if the knife hadn't killed him, the booze would .. I nev- er seen such a bad cirrhosis .. BERLIN You say the cut's left to right? (He does) Isn't that unusual? He's left handed? He picks up a nicotine-stained left hand. Simultaneously a LAB TECHNICIAN wants BERLIN to sign in exchange for the picnic box. PATHOLOGIST I guess he was so drunk, he did- n't know which hand he was using. (Re box) What are you gonna do with it? BERLIN Depends how healthy it is. If it's any good, I'll try and get a print .. He hands the clip-board back and remembers a question for ROSS. Oh, Ross, that newspaper guy at the station, asked me if the hand was "frozen?" Why would he ask me that? ROSS Frozen? .. I've no idea .. Another fast fix on the Vic and BERLIN chews fresh gum. A need- le on a weighing machine quivers. "The liver weighs 1420 grams." A few beers wouldn't do that to you, would they? PATHOLOGIST No, Freddy .. Not a few .. 17: INT. KITCHEN. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. EUREKA. DUSK. An explosion of hugs in the kitchen. Everything happens at once. MARGIE ROSS is slim and dark and still looking "twice as pretty." She's got compliments for BERLIN too if they can get out of each- other's arms "You're looking wonderful, John." But greetings are better performed than described, so I'm leaving it to the actors. ROSS You do a rush on three pizzas? He emerges from the refrigerator wielding a bottle of champagne. MARGIE I'm not giving him Pizza. I haven't seem him for a year? I'm gonna cook him a dinner. ROSS Dinner's another night, darlin .. This is a drive-by. I got an hour .. He detours via the kitchen door to shout upstairs. "Hey. Bobby.?" MARGIE Bobby's out .. What's the hurry? ROSS Friday night at City Hall. Got a great chance to frighten the fat. MARGIE Freddy's new obsession .. BERLIN Who is who? ROSS A professional, whining, con-person bitch with an ass the size of Africa .. ROSS fights a difficult cork "You wanna get some glasses, Honey?" She's an accounts-manager, very pal- ly with our mayor, up to her elbows in fraud, and I just can't prove it .. MARGIE So tonight she confesses? ROSS Tonight I'm feeling lucky .. The cork explodes and he goes for glasses but one isn't willing. BERLIN Not for me .. ROSS What d'you mean, I just opened it for you? This is French champagne. MARGIE No it isn't .. It's Californian .. ROSS Even better. BERLIN Not today .. I'm on a diet to- day .. I'll take a diet soda .. ROSS Since when did you drink diet soda? MARGIE Stop nagging him. If he doesn't want it, he doesn't want it. You- 're quacking like an old duck .. And she's already at the fridge and popping a can of diet cola. Here you go, Honey .. You're looking wonderful, John .. I can't believe we got you here .. ROSS How's the new residence? BERLIN O.K. ROSS What does that mean? BERLIN Not too good in daylight .. ROSS C'mon, just shut your eyes until it's painted. You're gonna love it. This is "God's Country," John. 18: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAY. This in huge close-up. Focus hardens on a finger tip. A shock of light. The focus adjusts and a flash bulb fires again. BER- LIN moves away from the view-finder. Chewing gum stuck to the side of the camera returns to his mouth. He activates an auto- matic rewind. It fills the silence while he heads for a phone. A lot of paraphernalia and technical type of shit. The bullet- in board is filling up. Photographs chronicle the hours spent on the dump. He dials with eyes on the pictures. A dozen cata- logue discovery of the bra. "This is Mike Blattis/I can't take your call right now/ If you have a message/You know the sound." 19: INT. DUTY ROOM/CORRIDOR/ADMIN. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. A reel to reel tape recorder the size of a refrigerator domin- ates the room. A black board details day/night/weekend shifts. T.V. security monitors. A rack of night-sticks. And of course paperwork. VENABLES crouches over a desk filling something in. BERLIN Would you drop these off for me? Sure he will and six rolls of film are handed across. "Are you winning, Sir?" BERLIN smiles and VENABLES follows him out into the corridor. A couple of Coppers on their way in. One big and morose looking called BISLEY. The other we've already met. Tay- lor is a tall balding guy with hazy reddish hair "How you doin?" BERLIN responds a happy "O.K." with eyes returning to VENABLES. You know something strange about that hand? I think it was frozen? VENABLES Frozen? BERLIN Yeah. What does that mean to you? Apparently little. They arrive in the big room. It's deserted. C'mon, Venables, you're a policeman. And policemen always have an answer? VENABLES Well, Sir .. BERLIN Well, what? VENABLES Well, we had a very bad murder here, coupla years ago. Not act- ually in our county, but south of here. Girl with no head, no hands. You didn't read about it? (He didn't) It was big shit. They had forty, fifty detective working it. Nev- er identified her. Never found the head, never found the hands .. A vacuum cleaner starts somewhere but BERLIN isn't hearing it. So it could be that some crazy's stored her hand in a freezer, and only now decided to get rid of it? BERLIN Where do I find the file on that? VENABLES In there if we got anything? I believe the code was "Jennifer." BERLIN is already looking. A last question as VENABLES leaves. Was it really frozen, Sergeant? BERLIN No. Been dead two weeks. 20: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAWN. The atrophied Hand is emersed in some kind of fluid. Index and second fingers bound with wire just below the upper joint. BER- LIN reaches for steel pliers. His face remains in close-up for a nasty "snap" as he cuts a finger off. He's filling a syringe with the same fluid when ROSS walks in. "Jesus, you still here?" BERLIN What time is it? ROSS Seven thirty-five .. Here, "Town Gets Top Cop." I was gonna pin it to your wall. A newspaper featuring a small photograph and article on Berlin. Holding the Finger he carefully inserts a hypodermic needle un- der the wire. Gently shoots in fluid to inflate the finger pad. BERLIN Why so coy about the word "frozen"? ROSS Because, don't get into it ... BERLIN There's nothing in the files? ROSS Watch my lips .. Don't get into it .. The Finger pad is sufficiently restored to try and get a print. It wasn't our case, wasn't our coun- ty, and got nothing to do with that. 21: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAY. A slide projector does its stuff on a sheet of card pinned to the door. Close-up of the Hand and off screen voice of BERLIN. "Notice anything weird about it?" The answer from ROSS is "No." A pen moves into frame and BERLIN points to marks on the Hand. BERLIN Look - 1 - 2 - 3/4 - 5 - 6 - 7 .. The machine shunts up another slide. Now the back of the Hand. I count eleven scars on this hand, and four that might be? .. Now I count em on my hand? Five. I'm 42 years old. This girl's about 18? How come she's got so many scars? He walks out of the projection beam and neon light flutters on. So tell me about "Jennifer?" Reaches for a pack of cigarettes and perches on a nearby stool. You know I'm gonna find out. BERLIN counts out cigarettes. And destroys them in an ashtray. ROSS It's an "unsolved." They spent 500 thousand dollars & bought emselves a dead end - You might wanna check it with Taylor, he worked the case. BERLIN I already did. What's his problem? ROSS reaches for the paper & thumb-tacks it to the wall "That." ROSS He thinks you stole his promotion. (Re cigarettes) What exactly you doin there, John? BERLIN It's a method for quitting smoking. A Zippo opens (sports L.A.P.D. insignia) and BERLIN lights up. He takes a punishing hit and exhales a lungful across the lab. ROSS That's an interesting method? Must help beat the withdrawal? Back on his feet BERLIN is about to begin more work on the Hand. BERLIN It's a technique I read about. If you smoke 60 a day, you buy three packs, throw one cigar- ette away, and smoke 59. Day 2, you throw 2 away and smoke 58 .. ROSS Why don't you throw them all away, and smoke none? BERLIN Because it's a ritual you gotta go through with. I'm down to 10. Daftest thing Ross ever heard. BERLIN is poised to make a print. ROSS You want my advice? BERLIN Maybe? ROSS Find yourself a farmer's daughter with nice big fucking tits, and shake that "bye-bye." Send it to Sacramento, John .. I sniff grief .. 22: INT. STAIRS/LIVING ROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. BERLIN & ROSS are opposite ends of a bed jammed on the stairs. "Bastards. I gave em a 20 buck tip." Various navigational sug- gestions from ROSS win them another stair. Plus advice from a 12 year old called BOBBY. "You gotta go left, Dad." ROSS knows he's gotta go left! Both heave as MARGIE walks out the kitchen. MARGIE You're all done except the floor. The house is a zoo of furniture. Bullshit piled up everywhere. BERLIN You're a saint, Margie, thanks .. By now she's got the apron off and her coat on. "C'mon, Bobby." MARGIE Don't forget the wagon, Darlin? And off they go via a slammed door as the phone starts to ring. 23: INT. BEDROOM. HOUSE. DAY. In they stagger. The bed goes down. And BERLIN sprawls on top of it. Devastated for oxygen. "Alright. That's it. I'm fucked." ROSS You gotta stop smoking .. BERLIN I am stopping smoking ... ROSS I don't mean this "system" shit that keeps you sucking, I mean stop .. I was exactly like you are .. I used to wake in the night - heart going so hard I coulda made love with my left tit .. If I can stop, you can .. BERLIN How'd you do it, old man? ROSS Someone bet me a dollar .. BERLIN A dollar? .. Not worth giving up for a dollar .. BERLIN manages to find air to sit. Reaches for the Ansa Phone. ROSS Alright. I'll bet you fifty? First call comes from Delaware Roofing vis-a-vis the estimate. BERLIN Fifty dollars? You got a bet. During these proceedings the machine has moved to another call. [MACHINE] [J.B./Ronzo/Got some results for you/ First/ the blood on the bra is human/ and it's not a popular brand/A.B. Neg and that's a rare one/Two/the blood on the brassie- re is compatible with the blood from the hand/Three/If you need anything else the official answer from all us Christians down here, is fuck off/Shoot me a duck/Bye] ROSS What are you gonna do, Soldier? BERLIN I'm gonna dig up "Jennifer." 24: INT. (TELETYPE)/ADMIN. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. And here's part of the "exhumation." CITRINE stares at a tele- type machine waiting for transmission on Jennifer to complete. Approximate date of birth/Approximate date of death/ Identity Unknown. Visible misgivings as he hauls it out and reads. One or two chairs already on desks. ROSS still at his pawing over documents with a detective called SERATO. Cigarette smoke and shirt sleeves. ROSS looks up and catches CITRINE as he passes. ROSS Chief, I gotta talk to ya about this fat lady? CITRINE What about her? ROSS She's making my life a misery .. I wanna give her a lie-detector test? CITRINE continues up the carpet. "Alright, we'll talk about it." 25: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. A florescent glow from a T.V. monitor supplies the only light. BERLIN vacillates interest between the scanner and the screen. CITRINE (O.S.) What is that? BERLIN Laser enhancement of the finger- tip .. it's really bothering me .. See these striations right here? (Green on the screen) It's like she's always worrying the end of her finger? Rubbing it with a thumb nail, or something? But CITRINE isn't interested in finger nails. He's staring at a polystyrene torso of a faceless girl. She wears a brassiere stuffed with newspaper and a black wig. (Welcome Jennifer Two) She's almost identical to Jennifer. Slim - White - same age - bra size is even the same. Nicely made lady. CITRINE stares at the Dummy like he's gonna ask it a question. CITRINE How do you know her hair's black? BERLIN Hair on her hand. Plus Jen- nifer had raven black hair. CITRINE What is all this Jennifer stuff? He waves a handful of teletype before dumping it on a bench. These cases aren't connected, John? BERLIN Yes, Sir, I think they maybe. I think "Jennifer," and this lady got hit by the same guy? CITRINE I don't see that at all .. On the board is a super-imposed picture of a hand over a wrist. BERLIN I got four points of posit- ive comparison on the cut .. CITRINE Yeah, that's all very inter- esting, but where's the body? A question he doesn't need because he hasn't an answer. CITRINE has an eye on further photographs relevant to the Jennifer case. I don't know nothing about this "Jenn- ifer" girl, cept what some of the guys told me - but principal feature of the case was a gruesome displayal of the body. He wanted it found. So if this is the same guy, why's he hidden this one? Another question he can't answer - and this time he doesn't get a chance - BISLEY walks in with an apology for the interruption. Got a face like Humphrey Bogart's mother fucked a different guy. BISLEY Just wondered if you had time to get around to my pharmacy stuff? BERLIN You'll have it in the morning .. BISLEY Alright, I'll try again tomorrow. Bisley has gone but his tension stays. BERLIN unwraps fresh gum. CITRINE Probably making him feel a bit antsy seein it back on the wall. He worked a lotta time on this. BERLIN I thought it was Taylor's case? CITRINE Sucked in officers from all over the county. And it was the worst six months this station ever had. This is CITRINE's shop and BERLIN isn't gonna row it with him. BERLIN What do you want me to do, Chief? CITRINE I'm not telling you what to do. What I will say, is right now, that child's tricycle there is more important to me than this .. He refers to a little bicycle. Vouchered and obviously stolen. By now CITRINE is at the hinges. A pause before he disappears. Why don't you give it a minute, & stop by my office. We should talk. 26: INT. MERCEDES SEDAN. CITY OF EUREKA. NIGHT. Melted neon in the streets. A wet mid-town night. Nothing but sound of windshield wipers and click of a Zippo lighter. ROSS rides stoic passenger while BERLIN drives with festering eyes. ROSS .. what does he think it is? BERLIN [ROSS] Everything it isn't [make a left]. He even tried a "self-inflicted." ROSS It's possible. BERLIN C'mon, Ross, the bra and hand were in different bags a 100 feet apart .. They stop at a light and a beeper goes as warning to the blind. What's she gonna do? Dump her bra in one bag, her hand in the other, and wander off whistling Hey Jude? ROSS It's the garage on the far corner. BERLIN is worrying at his fingertip on the wheel of the Zippo. You can't stop it, can you? BERLIN What do you mean? ROSS Worrying - clicking - picking - You may as well be back in Los Angeles. BERLIN What do you mean, Ross? The lights change and off they go and BERLIN waits for a turn. ROSS Why don't you dump it? Mail it off. Give the fucking F.B.I. a present? BERLIN Why don't you dump the "Fat Lady?" ROSS Because I dislike her too much .. BERLIN O.K. and I'm not in love with this fukker? That's how I feel about him. ROSS No you don't. That's how you think you feel about him. That's how you feel about yourself. You won't give yourself one-fucking-minute for you. And by now they've arrived and pulled up on the garage forecourt. It's indicative of their friendship that ROSS can talk like this. Wait for me. It might not be ready. He quits the car and BERLIN watches him scurry towards a service shop. Rain beats on the roof and BERLIN looks stubbed out. A lot of cuts coming up and here are some of them. Runs a hand through his hair in unconscious frustration. A finger constantly bothers the Zippo. Eyes towards ROSS who silhouettes in florescent light. Somewhere in the background the lights change to red. Once again the beeping sound of traffic-lights speaking to the blind. Maybe he looks across but that doesn't matter. Something just happens inside his head he isn't yet quite aware of. Everything in close up. Big on the Zippo. Big on BERLIN. And he leaps out of the car. BERLIN sprints through the weather. A station wagon is still in the air at the end of an hydraulic jack. Surprise from ROSS and a MECHANIC as BERLIN arrives. Fuck the fanbelt and listen to this. BERLIN I just had this insane idea - if I'm wrong, I'll take a week off and redecorate your entire house .. Rain beats at the roof and the jack sinks the wagon behind them. She's blind, Ross - that's why all the scars - hear that traffic light? That noise is to help blind people - that's why the marks on her finger- tips? - this lady reads in Braille .. 27: INT. ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN sits at a desk at the end of the room. Nothing here but a legal pad and a phone. The pad is covered in names & numbers. Right now he's into a call and this is sounding promising."How old?" And he writes 26. "How long?" About 6 weeks ago. Hope in his eyes as he looks across to a woman called ANN. She's doing what he's doing on a different line "Wait a minute, I specific- ally said I was looking for a girl?" And all hope over because Lesley is a boy. But here comes ANN & this might be something? ANN Shasta-Trinity Institute. Line one. Sticks a sheet of notes on his desk and he junks the last call. BERLIN (New call) Hello .. Yes .. This is Sergeant Berlin .. Yes, that's right .. I believe my assistant explained? .. How long ago was that? .. Uh-huh. O.K. .. Who is who? .. Whass his name? Goodridge? O.K. I'll hold .. ROSS in transit grinning from ear to ear. BERLIN interested in little but his notes and ROSS in nothing but obvious good news. ROSS Pig Woman agreed to take a test. BERLIN I think I got something - twenty two years old, dark hair - study- ing mathematics - (Yes, yes, I'm holding) - Last seen 5 weeks ago .. 28: EXT. LANDSCAPE/ROAD. TRINITY FOREST. DAY. Mussorgsky is back on a shock cut. Big music and a shattering landscape. Juniper woods and mountains. Sunlight on fresh fal- len snow. Somewhere a long way off a car crawls up the valley. Ross's car bursts into frame and as quickly the bend snatches it away. An unexpected building in the distance. Victorian at a glance but probably later. A clock tower and fifty lifeless windows. The Chevy disappears towards its somber architecture. 29: EXT. THE SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. DAY. Pine trees and slush and parked cars. The Chevrolet swings in and parks in front of the mansion. Breath in the air and eyes on the ugly pile as they slam doors and head for its entrance. 30: INT. ENTRANCE/RECEPTION. INSTITUTE. DAY. BERLIN first with ROSS following. As soon as they hit the ent- rance they trigger a recorded voice. "YOU ARE NOW AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE. THERE ARE SIX STEPS." Midway up them with ROSS look- ing back. "RECEPTION IS THROUGH SWING DOORS AND TO YOUR RIGHT." 31: INT. PRINCIPAL'S OFFICER. INSTITUTE. DAY. GOODRIDGE is mid-50's with a beard like Abraham Lincoln. Sits far side of his desk alternating eyes between ROSS and BERLIN. The latter studies a photograph of a Girl in a file. It's pos- sible they've found Jennifer Two? "How recent is the picture?" GOODRIDGE As recent as we have .. What ex- actly is your interest in Amber? BERLIN I'm afraid I can't give you an ans- wer to that, Mr Goodridge. As I ex- plained to your secretary, we're do- ing a lotta looking, but we're not even sure it's her we're lookin for .. GOODRIDGE Then what are you hoping I'm gon- na do? Dissuade, or persuade you? BERLIN I was hopin since we spoke that you might have remembered something that would give us an idea where she is? GOODRIDGE Then you could have saved yourself a lot of driving, Sergeant. What I said on the phone's the same as I'm saying now. I got no idea where Amb- er is, or who it was took her there. He doesn't like them but not as much as ROSS doesn't like him. ROSS A blind girl can just walk out of here, and you don't know who with? GOODRIDGE You find something curious in that? ROSS Yeah, I guess I do. GOODRIDGE Then let me put your mind at ease .. Firstly, Amber isn't "blind" - she has some useful vision - and second, this isn't a prison, it's a college of higher education - a severe vis- ual disability doesn't mean my stud- ents don't value their independence as much as anybody else - and Amber was a very independent young woman - She decided to leave - so she left .. ROSS And you got no idea with who? GOODRIDGE No, Sergeant, I got no idea with who. And I might add, that in another six weeks, a hundred and fifty students will be leaving here, & driving away for their Christmas holidays with pe- ople whose name I-won't-know-either .. ROSS could sock him in the crop but the phone rings and he ex- cuses himself to answer it. Whatever he hears he isn't liking. You have an appointment with Miss Robertson? BERLIN Yes, Sir. GOODRIDGE As she's a member of my staff, may I ask what this is about? BERLIN Well, apparently, she saw Amber the weekend she left, & was briefly in the room with the guy she left with. GOODRIDGE I see .. Well, she's teaching an- other class at four .. I'd apprec- iate it if you don't detain her .. 32: INT. CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. DAY. Looking back down a deserted corridor. Someone tried to put sun- shine on the walls with yellow paint. Somewhere a long way away there is a sound like children singing. ROSS loathes this joint. Loathes its silence. Eyes back to BERLIN as he rings a doorbell. ROSS Where is everyone? BERLIN I dunno .. I guess this is staff side of the building? Here come footsteps and the door is opened by HELENA ROBERTSON. Early 20's and blonde and not immediately beautiful. But delic- ate features than need no make up and big dark eyes. They look away for introductions as though she's shy. ROSS & BERLIN grab glances as they follow in. Neither expected HELENA to be blind. 33: INT. APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. DAY. Claustrophobia evaporates instantly. Great views down the val- ley from every window. Plus a bizarre jumble of furniture and colors. But no pictures on the walls. No friendly photographs. Nor any lights. Although the afternoon is shutting down there isn't a light in the room. ROSS elects to stay at the windows. BERLIN takes an offered chair. HELENA sits nervously opposite. HELENA What d'you wanna ask, Mr Ross? BERLIN I'm Mr Berlin. Mr Ross is right here. And Mr Ross is maybe gonna take a few notes, if that's O.K.? (She nods) O.K. .. I'd like you to tell me in what ever way you want, what you can remember about the time you spent with Amber on the aft- ernoon she left? Take your time, and nothing's too trivial, O.K. HELENA Well, I think I told you on the phone .. I went up to her room to say good-bye, and we just sat on the bed and chatted a while, while her friend was coming in and out collecting her things .. BERLIN What kind of friend? Was he a boy friend? An old friend? New friend? Lots of headshake. And lots of silences. "I really don't know." That's O.K. Can you give me any idea what this fellow was like? (Headshake) Well, d'you know how old he was? (Headshake) Alright, let me put it this way? How old d'you think I am? Twenty- six? Thirty-nine? Or fifty-three? HELENA Fifty-three. Possibly the only grin ROSS is going to get out of this place. BERLIN You must have some idea about him. HELENA When we spoke on the phone, did you know I was blonde? BERLIN No. HELENA Why not? You heard my voice? A good point. And a point taken. And BERLIN might even say so. We don't have some kind of sixth-sense, you know. Ex- cept in ridiculous novels .. Now another silence overtaken by a low whistle in another room. He used a breath freshener ... A sardonic headshake from ROSS. Well that solves the case then! And I think his name was John? BERLIN John? .. You never said that on the phone? .. What makes you think his name was John? HELENA I don't know. I guess she must have called him John? I'm mak- ing tea. Would you like some? BERLIN would but ROSS wouldn't. She leaves and whispers begin. BERLIN This looks promising .. I think this one could be it? ROSS Thank Christ we got a witness. BERLIN Let me just keep going a while. She might remember something? ROSS What? She's blind, Bro. You may as well ask one of these Beethoven guys on the piano? He thumbs a cluster of cheap busts of composers on an upright. We're better off having another pop at old Abe Lincoln down the- re? Get angry with the prick. Get some of his "useful visions" in? Someone must have seen something? Negative from BERLIN. Checked it out. Sunday and no one about. This is fucken crazy. Two hours here, two hours back, and the only word I've written is John .. A touch later and the sun is setting. ROSS stands at a window to watch it go. Watches one or two cars driving away. Watches a bird sitting outside on the fire-escape. BERLIN's voice can just about be heard off screen "You said he spoke? Can you re- member what he said?" ROSS saunters back into HELENA's answer. HELENA Well, he just said, come on, hurry up, will you, because it's starting to snow again. Empty teacups and empty notebook. ROSS sits opposite BERLIN. And I remember, he was a lit- tle breathless from carrying the cases because the elevat- or had gone out that weekend. BERLIN The elevator wasn't working? HELENA No, it has a mind of its own. A clock strikes four somewhere. And BERLIN knows he's lost it. BERLIN Can I see your hands? HELENA My hands? He takes her hands and HELENA immediately looks uncomfortable. He examines scars and she stares at him with her useless eyes. I have a class. I have to go. BERLIN Is there anything else you can tell me? Anything about him or her? Doesn't matter how small? HELENA No. Except he smoked. Like you. BERLIN Me? HELENA Yes, I could smell it on his breath, like I can on your's. A taut instant between ROSS and BERLIN. BERLIN caught out and he knows it. ROSS roars in silence "YOU LYING PIG" and writes in his notebook. The angle switches to see "BERLIN IS A LIAR." I'm late .. I really have to go .. Everyone suddenly on their feet and HELENA gets into a jacket. BERLIN D'you have a dog? Seeing Eye Dog? HELENA No. BERLIN Lotta scratch-marks on your door? HELENA Sometimes I look after friends dogs, if they go to dances, or something? ROSS Could I just refer you to this memo here, Sergeant? He tries to get his notebook under BERLIN's nose. But BERLIN isn't looking or listening but following HELENA into her hall. BERLIN Did Amber have a dog? HELENA Yes. BERLIN What color was it? HELENA I don't know. She opens the door and ROSS is barely through before it slams. 34: INT. CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. DAY. ROSS baits BERLIN up the corridor. Ridicules in silence while counting imaginary winnings. Watch my lips! F.I.F.T.Y. HELENA walks innocent of the pantomime and BERLIN tries to ignore it. BERLIN .. if she writes, or calls, or any- thing at all, you let me know, O.K. He bells the elevator refusing to acknowledge ROSS's bullshit. I'll leave a number with the office .. Lips drill a whisper into his ear. "Fifty fucken dollars, O.K." What exactly do you teach, Helena? HELENA Music composition .. and cello .. ROSS Fifty of em. And I want em now. Meanwhile the elevator arrives triggering a Voice. "YOU ARE NOW ON THE FOURTH FLOOR." Doors slide open and Christ look at this? What kind of eye-defect needs glasses like this? Lenses like ei- ther half of a glass ball. He's early 30's and decidedly "iffy." Is he student/staff or what? As he exits they enter staring aft- er him. As the doors close the MYOPIC turns to stare after them. 35: INT. CHEVROLET. TRINITY VALLEY. DUSK. ROSS drives and BERLIN studies Amber's file. "Wanna beer?" No answer but cans appear anyway from a pack between Ross's legs. BERLIN Had a seeing Eye Dog since she was eighteen .. didn't I tell you those dogs meant something .. ROSS No, you didn't. BERLIN Alright, I didn't, but I nearly did, and if I had I'd have been right .. I knew there was some- thing about that Labrador, that dog was too good to be dead .. We gotta get back up that dump .. ROSS No way .. not me, Mister. I'm not going up there again. Might find someone's prick in a hot-dog roll. BERLIN We're going. ROSS Forget it. They got stringent hyg- iene rules. He's long gone in lime. ROSS pops cans and hands one over. But BERLIN doesn't want it. BERLIN Maybe not? I'm feeling lucky .. ROSS So am I. But where's my money? BERLIN Don't start again. If you win a bet, you can't keep winning it .. ROSS Pay me, and I shut up. BERLIN I haven't got it. ROSS Then give me that Zippo. BERLIN Why? ROSS I need some security. I don't trust you anymore. BERLIN I had one puff on a pipe. ROSS I don't want excuses, I want that weird-looking stuff called "cash." Snaps fingers "Gimme the lighter." And he does to shut him up. I'll tell you what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna do you a big favor .. Forget the 50 and I'll keep this. BERLIN What do you want it for? ROSS To throw out of the window. Does it as he says it. Bye-bye Zippo! BERLIN can't believe it. BERLIN What are you doing, Ross? I've had that 15 years! .. ROSS It's not your friend. It keeps you sucking. Remem- ber the old Bum's lungs? BERLIN I remember the old bastard's liver! I don't believe you did that. I had a great sent- imental attachment to that. ROSS You want me to stop the car? An academic question considering the Zippo went down a ravine. BERLIN No! Get me to that garbage dump! I'm gonna find that fucking dog! 36: EXT. CITY DUMP. CITY OF EUREKA. NIGHT. Gloom congeals around flashlights. A winter mist falling down. TRIMBLE and Doberman watch as BERLIN goes at it with a shovel. A dozen graves already dug and he's halfway into another. Des- pite the cold he sweats in shirt sleeves. Also breathless and rests to catch his wind. "Don't you have to go to bed?" No he doesn't. He wants to see the victim. Digging recommences with TRIMBLE supplying the light. BERLIN suddenly stops. "Get that lamp down here." White lime. Black fur. They've found the Dog. BERLIN begins an examination holding a tiny flashlight in his teeth. Eyes excitedly back to TRIMBLE and gesturing towards a bag. "That bag there. You find a knife and a paira long-nosed pliers." TRIMBLE does it relishing the snap of a switch-blade. BERLIN still busy with the light in his mouth. TRIMBLE pissed because he can't see what's happening. BERLIN removes a crump- led bullet from the back of the Labrador's skull. Holds it up for scrutiny. Small calibre. Badly distorted. "Looks like a 22?" BERLIN You didn't shoot him did you? TRIMBLE Me .. I love dogs .. Ask him? 37: INT. ANTI ROOM/ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. LETTERS BIG AS A HOUSE. And Loud. The printer reciprocates as fast as its mechanics are capable. Details coming in from San Diego. VICAP Case Number/F.B.I. Case Number/Victim Status/etc etc. Letters smacking into paper too fast to read. But one de- tail is repeated constantly and underlined. "Identity Unknown." Transmission ends and BERLIN hauls at least a yard of homicide out of the machine. Can't believe what he's looking at. "Jesus. He hit six." Reads as he walks back into the big room and gets interrupted by a call. "Miss Robertson. Holding." He heads for the phone with eyes following ANN "Find Ross for me, will you?" BERLIN (Phone) Berlin .. yeah .. that's nice of you, Helena, but I already found out .. black, yes .. No, no, of course not, good of you to call .. You heard a what? .. A hollow car? A hand shoves papers at the edge of his vision. TAYLOR looks a mite cheesy. "You got a minute for this?" And BERLIN nods sure. Yes, I'm still here .. Why didn't you mention that? .. I see .. Al- right, we should talk again .. No, I'm just south of my eye-lids in it right now .. How about Sunday? 38: EXT. COAST ROAD. HUMBOLDT BAY. EUREKA. DAY. The first shining day of November. Sand dunes and an infinite stretch of beach. Behind the sea-break is a lagoon and a tiny harbor. Berlin's Mercedes descends the coast road towards it. 39: EXT. HARBOR. HUMBOLDT BAY. EUREKA. DAY. Ross's boat is a 35 foot fisherman. Shining brass and varnish. But like him it's getting on and often grumpy. This last qual- ity presently evident in both. Engine roaring and ROSS is cov- ered in oil. BERLIN has to shout above the racket to be heard. BERLIN .. I put the slug in for a ballis- tics report, the man tells me, for get it. Soft lead, it's worthless .. I think, fuck it. And fuck Citrine. I call a friend of mine in Los Ang- eles, and he runs our whole damned show through a main-frame looking for anything similar to our ladies shot with a twenty-two - you don't believe what he finds in San Diego .. ROSS detours eyes to wave at his Son. "Watch those revs there." Would you shut it down a min- ute, Ross? This is important. ROSS signals BOBBY to turn off. And the diesel splutters down. ROSS Alright, let's take a walk around the block .. I gotta buy a gasket .. 40: EXT. QUAY/HARBOR. HUMBOLDT BAY. DAY. Seagulls and sunshine and probably Saturday because the place is busy. ROSS walks with BERLIN up a wooden quay. Their journ- ey will take them across a small bridge towards a Marine Shop. BERLIN Six girls over a period of 18 months, and give or take a head or two, the M.O.'s exactly the same. Dark hair. No hands. All shot with a high velocity twen- ty-two in the back of the head. ROSS How come the F.B.I. don't put anya this together? They work- ed over "Jennifer" for months? BERLIN They possibly did - but they nev- er had a head, so they never had a bullet - and they never got an I.D. - not on any of em - never bust a homicide unless you know who your victim is - we're the first to get a positive identity. ROSS Identity of whom? You got a girl, doesn't even have a driver's lic- ense? .. She's untraceable, John .. You need fifty detectives on this. BERLIN That's what I'm here for. I want you to come and see Citrine with me? He's not gonna here it from me but I know he'd listen to you. ROSS Listen to me saying what? BERLIN I wanna take that fucking Blind In- stitute to pieces .. Every address book, every phone call, everyone in and outta there in the last 5 years .. ROSS For a dead dog? BERLIN We've fused into a major series, Ross. This girl isn't the second victim. This is "Jennifer Eight." And this is the second time they stop and stare at each other. That old Wino on the heap wasn't a suicide. He stumbled into some- thing, saw something, and whoever took him out knew how to fake it. ROSS That isn't what you said before. BERLIN I was wrong. Says it with remarkable humility considering he's the "expert." I'm going in to see Citrine this afternoon. Will you come with me? ROSS You're not .. He's in hospital .. He was trying out a new pair of skis in his hallway. The phone rings, and he goes for it, and falls off. He must be the only skier in Northern California to break a leg in his living room. They arrive at the Chandler's with BERLIN in no mood to smile. BERLIN You believe me, don't you? ROSS What does it matter what I bel- ieve? .. What you gotta worry about is what Citrine believes .. But he doesn't really believe it. And doesn't enjoy saying no. But I can't help you with this. We can't go through the door with two contentious issues, you with a mass murderer, and me with the Mayor's best friend. Do that, we lose both. I'm sorry, Bro, you're on your own. 41: EXT. TRINITY VALLEY. DAY. (HELICOPTER) The Mercedes and Music travel north. The latter made sinister by this landscape. Forest plunging into dark ravines. The sun colors the mountains red. But most of the valley is in shadow. 42: EXT. DRIVE/PARKING. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. DAY. A high wind in the chimneys. And the view is still from above. Like someone's looking down from the top of the building. And maybe someone is? BERLIN parks it and gets out. Stretches and walks towards the institute. He looks very small from up here. 43: INT. GYMNASIUM. INSTITUTE. DAY. HELENA plays Elgar in an empty gymnasium. Sunlight streams in staining the air red. As BERLIN arrives doors on the opposite wall flap together like somebody just hurried out. Did he see someone? Perhaps not. The trees outside move a lot of shadows. Music stands. Vacant chairs. BERLIN takes one to watch her re- hearse. Realizes just how beautiful she is. And HELENA realiz- es someone is there. Before she can ask he identifies himself. HELENA Have you been here long? BERLIN No, just a minute or two .. I knocked on your door - no one home, so I followed the music .. HELENA I'm sorry. I'll get my things. BERLIN No problem. I'm not in a hurry. But she's already fussing about stuffing sheet music in a bag. Matter of fact, I saw a little restaurant place down the road. Looked kinda pretty? I thought maybe we could have some lunch? No answer but the answer is no. BERLIN finds her book for her. Alright, whatever .. Was some- one in here with you? When I came in the door was flapping? HELENA I don't think so .. No one comes here at the weekends .. 44: INT. STAIRCASE. INSTITUTE. DAY. The gale shouts its head off. The Camera looks down from above. Nothing to see except the stairwell and a hand on the banister. HELENA (O.S.) I suppose I'm the worst witness you've ever had? BERLIN (O.S.) I gotta admit, you're one of them. Just wish I knew what you meant by a "hollow car?" HELENA (O.S.) Well, some cars sound fat and some cars sound thin, and this kind of car sounded "hollow" .. Any moment now they turn a corner of the stairs into close-up. Maybe it was a foreign car? Our kinda cars sound "fat." The elevator is parked on this floor with its doors half open. Are you sure you wanna see it? It's another three floors up? Despite breathlessness he does. "How often does it break down?" Oh, all the time. They keep threatening to have it re- placed, but they never will. 45: INT. ATTIC APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. DAY. Gloomy windows and a wardrobe. BERLIN walks in leaving HELENA at the door. "I sat right there, on the bed." The bed is gone but why tell her? He checks the wardrobe. Guess what? Hangers. HELENA If I came to the diner with you, would you bring me back? BERLIN Of course I would .. His smile deteriorates as he realizes she's "staring" at him. What are you staring at, Hel- ena? .. I mean .. I'm sorry .. HELENA That's alright. You suddenly reminded me of him .. He was standing right where you are, kind of breathless, like you. Nothing happening except the wind. Then a smile as she leaves. I'll get my coat, wait for you downstairs .. And he begins an exploration. Musty bathroom with old-fashion- ed fixtures. A tap leaking behind shower curtains. Nothing in the cabinet. Nothing under the sink. Six steps and he is in a kitchen. Finally finds something worth looking for. Tears the sack out of a vacuum cleaner. Discovers a knot of hair from a black dog. Simultaneously the door slams. Shock powers him in- to the sitting room in time to hear a key turning in the lock. Hits the door and shouts. Hears footsteps moving rapidly away. 46: INT. RECEPTION. INSTITUTE. DAY. A huge Christmas poster advertises SHASTA-TRINITY ARTS/CRAFTS. HELENA sits in the deserted foyer reading Braille. The volume is the size of a phone directory. BERLIN appears via the main entrance. Windswept and wasted and surprised she's still here. BERLIN I'm sorry, someone slammed the door on me. I couldn't get out. HELENA It was probably the wind. Hellava wind that turns a key! But he says nothing. Takes the book while she gets into her coat. She's obviously made an ef- fort. A change of clothes and her hair pinned up. But she has got the sweater on inside out and the label is under her chin. BERLIN What are you reading? HELENA Hamlet. Have you read it? BERLIN No. HELENA You should. It's wonderful. By now they're at the doors with BERLIN escorting her through. 47: INT. RESTAURANT/DINER. TRINITY VALLEY. DAY. Red brick walls and help yourself to salad. All but empty and their food is yet to arrive. BERLIN is clearly having a tough time with the conversation. Basically because there isn't any. BERLIN .. I'll tell you what, if I prom- ise to stop being a cop, will you promise to stop being a witness? HELENA sits frozen like she's waiting for results of an X-ray. I mean, we don't havta sit here waiting for me to ask the next question? You could ask one, too? HELENA Are you wearing a uniform? BERLIN No. HELENA Oh. BERLIN Well, I'm glad we got the conver- sational side of lunch over with. HELENA I'm sorry .. I don't like sitting in the middle of a restaurant .. I feel like everyone's looking at me .. BERLIN There's no one "looking at you" .. There's hardly anyone in here. The only person looking at you, is me. And he likes what he's looking at. And maybe HELENA senses it. HELENA Are you married? BERLIN Was. But I don't like to talk about it. HELENA You just asked me to ask you questions. BERLIN I know, but you pick on the one time in my life I like not to remember. I was in the bad lands. Really not well. It's something that happens to a lota cops. We don't wanna talk about that. HELENA "Thoughts that lie too deep for tears." BERLIN Yeah, that'll do .. Is that "Hamlet?" HELENA No, Wordsworth .. Do you like poetry? His attention is temporarily elsewhere. A Lunch Party just arr- ived. It's clear GOODRIDGE is profoundly unhappy to see BERLIN. BERLIN I don't know, I haven't read much. I don't think poetry's my kinda thing? HELENA Do you pray? BERLIN Pray? HELENA You said, you were in the bad lands? BERLIN No, I don't pray .. Had a dream once, about God, just around the time I was getting well .. He was a nasty lookin little guy, moved into the apartment right on topa me .. I said, don't you listen to people's prayers? He said, prayers? Not often. They're Junk Mail. 48: INT. MERCEDES SEDAN. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. DAY. Big pines either side of the driveway. The Camera sits in the back more interested in the approaching institute than BERLIN. BERLIN .. I got really sick of the street .. so I went to school and became a Scientific Services Officer, which is basically a Scene of Crime Off- icer. Then this came up, and I got what they call a Lateral Transfer .. Pulls into a parking spot and the next sound is the hand brake. I couldn't take another minute of Los Angeles .. Felt like I'd said sorry in every street in the city .. HELENA Sorry? BERLIN .. sorry your father, mother sis- ter, whatever .. I couldn't take another day of it .. Come on, I'm gonna rob you of a cup of coffee .. 49: EXT/INT. FIRE ESCAPE/APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. DUSK. BERLIN looks down from the fire escape. For the first time the place sounds busy. Cars arriving and doors slamming. Voices of Students coming back from the weekend. "Why were you out there?" HELENA waits inside and didn't realize he was back in the room. HELENA Coz I wanted to feel the snow on my face .. I think that's when I heard her call him John? Time to go and both know it. Stale shadows and growing silence. Is it snowing now? BERLIN No. Getting dark though. And his eyes are searching her so hard she must be aware of it. You think you'd know this man? If he was in the room with you again? HELENA You've already asked me that .. The silence is almost uncomfortable. BERLIN continues to stare. Amber's dead, isn't she? BERLIN Yes. I'm sorry. 50: EXT. SUBURBAN STREET. CITY OF EUREKA. DAY. Pretty houses in a pretty little street. Hills in the back and sunshine out front. BERLIN pulls up in his Mercedes and does a bit of tie adjusting as he walks up a path and hits the chimes. This could only be MRS CITRINE. A budget smile and he's inside. 51: INT. "STUDIO"/CONSERVATORY. HOUSE. DAY. Dozens of repulsive paintings. A truly repulsive painting "By Numbers" of the Mona Lisa in progress. The color codes are com- pletely fucked up. CITRINE wears a wooly hat and hates walking on crutches. BERLIN picked a bad day to come in here with this. CITRINE You're pushing this too hard. It's like you want me to say stop? You must know that's the way this is going, John? There's other work to do, why don't ya ease off a little? BERLIN Coz this is a major & we're closer to this bastard than anyone's ever been. CITRINE Then where's the body? .. Where's the body, and why's he hidden it? BERLIN He hasn't hidden it. He never made a hit this far north before, and he never read a weather forecast .. She's probably fifteen feet from the highway, three feet under snow. CITRINE Have you got a match on the bullet? BERLIN No. CITRINE Have you got a print from the hand? BERLIN No, Sir. CITRINE It could be anyone's hand. Illeg- ally disposed of hospital debris .. BERLIN It's her hand. Her scars. Her dog. Her dog's shot. And she's missing. CITRINE She's not "missing." Did she shout? Did she scream? Did he coerce her? No. She left of her own free will .. And if she gets on a plane and goes to Peru with the prick, she's still not missing. You got no case, John. BERLIN If you're not gonna hear me, Chief .. CITRINE I have heard you. You just don't like hearing me. You got this whole damned thing outta proportion. I don't know what you gotten used to in Los Angeles, but I don't believe there's a Police Chief, in this country, would put a task force together for a body part .. BERLIN We have a multiple homicide, Sir .. CITRINE We have a body part in suspicious circumstances - a tailor's dummy wearing a brassiere - and a bill for seventeen dollars for its wig! 52: INT. CORRIDOR/ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN arrives at the station in the same mood he left Citrine. Heads for his room and runs into ROSS's stare. Problems on his plate too. He sits at his desk looking uncharacteristically an- xious. What ever he's drinking isn't tea. He finds a bottle of J&B in a drawer and walks toward Berlin's freshly slammed door. 52: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAY. The lab is stuffed with junk waiting his attention. (Dozens of common things made sinister by their labels and plastic sacks). ROSS delivers a dose of Scotch in a plastic cup. Pours himself another. Leans on a bench and gets into the pissed-off silence. ROSS Did he shut you down? BERLIN All but .. How you doing? ROSS I dunno, I daren't go in there - just about get her wired up, and the fucking mayor walks in - mad as hell - what are we doing fuck- ing with his staff? We should be out chasing major violators .. BERLIN I wish he'd tell that to Citrine. He almost does the whiskey but reaches for chewing gum instead. He thinks the kid shot the dog .. He looks at ROSS like what-are-you-looking-at-me-like-that-for? He didn't. ROSS Did I say he did? BERLIN You looked like you did? ROSS No, I think you'll find I looked like he could have? By accident even? He's up here spraying the scenery all day. BERLIN He didn't shoot it, Ross. And no way by accident. There's a flash-burn. It was point-blank. SERATO walks in with a cigarette plugged into his ashen kisser. SERATO Flying colors ... ROSS Say you didn't say that, Angelo? SERATO I said it. ROSS Oh my God Mother's shit. Are we in it? 54: INT. ANTI ROOM/INTERROGATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. This room and the interrogation room are linked with a one-way mirror. BERLIN looks through munching gum. EMERSON is 25 years old and many pounds of vexed flesh. But something about her ex- pression expects apology. SERATO paces the place chain-smoking. ROSS listens devastated as the EXPERT explains his lousy chart. EXPERT This is the important one. She gets a dead straight line, and that's an exceptional reading .. SERATO .. this is the stupidest thing we ever done. Fucking Citrine's gonna fire one of us for this .. ROSS I can't believe it. I just know she someway busted it. EXPERT This is an honest girl. She couldn't lie if she tried .. BERLIN Is she lying, Ross? For a moment there is an intense trust between ROSS and BERLIN. ROSS Yes. Alright fuck it. Let's go for broke. BERLIN grabs the read out. Fueled on residual anger he vanishes out the door. ROSS is fir- st at the mirror to see him reappear in the interrogation room. 55: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. The polygraph machine looks like state of the art. A table and two chairs. BERLIN takes one and sits opposite EMERSON. She at- tempts a smile but he kills it with the intensity of his stare. BERLIN My name's Sergeant John Berlin. And the time is his. He knows what he's doing. And she doesn't. I been a policeman 17 years: 16 years 9 months of which with the L.A.P.D. I witnessed literally hundreds of lie-detector tests, and I never seen one like this? EMERSON What d'ya mean, Sergeant? BERLIN Well, look at it. Look at this line? That's the important one. Dead straight down the page. No- body gets a dead straight down the page. Even our expert says a dead straight's "exceptional." All he's doing is telling her truth. Up to her to interpret it. Thought you might wanna comment? A tongue slides through the lipstick like something being born. EMERSON I wasn't actually lying, Officer. And suddenly the only thing holding her chops up is Max Factor. He's got her on the roll now and all it needs is one more push. BERLIN You busted the box, lady! You flunk- ed it .. You lied about things you didn't need to lie about .. The only truthful statement you made's your name .. Your name is Carol Emerson? The quivering lip and flooding eyes amalgamate into a horrible sort of groan. She's bellied up and anxious to spill her beans. BERLIN better get through the door fast because he might laugh. You tell one more lie, you're go- ing in a cell. Sergeant Ross is coming in to take your statement. 56: EXT. ROSS'S BOAT. HUMBOLDT BAY. EUREKA. DAY. A wave atomizes and comes down like silver champagne. HELENA & BERLIN hang on the prow of the boat with the ocean rushing bel- ow. Another wave and more spray for HELENA. She turns like get- ting sea in your face is the best invention ever. Oilskins sat- urated and her hair streaming and she knows he's loving it too. 57: INT. WHEELHOUSE. BOAT. DAY. Sunshine & spray on the windshield. ROSS at the wheel with MAR- GIE next to him. Eyes on BERLIN & HELENA playing like children. MARGIE Such a shame .. She's a really sweet kid .. ROSS She's a doll. But I wish he hadn't brought her out here. Stairs descend to a cabin and ROSS interrupts himself to shout. Bobby, what happened to that beer? Rule one, is you don't diddle around with a witness. MARGIE He's happy, darlin .. ROSS I'm sure he is. But gettin in- to the "element" is a bad idea. BOBBY clatters up the stairs clutching a six pack of Budweiser. Tell em I'm going up the coast a way, get out of this weather. BOBBY exits the wheelhouse and walks their eyes back to HELENA. MARGIE (O.S.) Except for the hair color, she looks just like Suzanne? ROSS (O.S.) Well, that's who she is. Cept she can't run away. 58: EXT. FISHING DECK ABOVE WHEELHOUSE. BOAT. DAY. Wind over and sea content and anchored about a mile from shore. Smoke from a dying barbecue and Nat King Cole croons "Unforget- able." ROSS sports shades and sits staring down the line. Some- one plays lousy guitar and he shifts eyes into the well of the boat. HELENA teaches BOBBY to play chords. Hardly worth the ef- fort but they're enjoying it. BERLIN looks down from the oppos- ite side of the deck. His gaze interrupted by MARGIE "You want another Coke, honey?" Sure he does and her eyes travel to ROSS. MARGIE You want something, darling? ROSS I wouldn't mind another B.E.E.R. In code so BERLIN won't understand. But he and ROSS swap grins. How much longer you on that diet? BERLIN I'm doing it by the day ... MARGIE climbs the stairs with drinks and drinks a beer herself. Popped cans change the subject. This seems like a question BER- LIN doesn't really want to ask & MARGIE doesn't want to answer. How's your little sister? MARGIE She's in Europe .. BERLIN Working? Clearly a sensitive subject and ROSS decides the truth is best. ROSS She married some English prick. MARGIE He's not that bad of a guy ..? ROSS Got a handshake like a partially excited penis. The joke doesn't reach BERLIN. MARGIE's hand is on his shoulder. MARGIE Her loss, darlin .. And she heads for the lower deck. A sweet smile as she descends. Anyway, you're doing O. K. She's a sweet heart. And also playing the guitar "In My Life." And she does it well. ROSS Why's she blind, Bro? BERLIN Car accident. Slow banging of something swaying. And this exchange goes slow. Whole family wiped out. ROSS No shit. A bleeper goes on one of the lines and ROSS twists in his seat. Strap me in. Here comes another. And he winds in yet another three quarters of a pound Mackerel. Worst day's fishing I ever had .. BERLIN It's been a great day. ROSS dexterously extracts the hook with serious eyes on BERLIN. ROSS You just go easy, Brother ... (Looks at fish) Alright, we're all goin home. 59: EXT. CAR PARK AT BEACH. DUSK. Darkness in about an hour. Wide over the car park. Sand dunes surround it. Practically deserted of cars. Headlights snap on focusing attention on a station wagon exchange of good-byes. HELENA (V.O.) I really liked Margie .. Silhouettes with exaggerated shadows walk across the car park. What does she do? BERLIN (V.O.) She runs a kind of hair dress- ing and you know, beauty salon .. HELENA (V.O.) Have you known her long? BERLIN (V.O.) I was married to her sister .. The angle changes and is closer now. HELENA has taken his arm. You don't ask what I'm like? HELENA I know what you're like .. BERLIN How d'you know what I'm like? HELENA Ross told me. BERLIN Really? What did he say? HELENA He said you're quite chubby. And you have a nervous tick. BERLIN He said that? What else did he say? HELENA Just your age. BERLIN Which is what? HELENA Fifty-seven .. I don't mind .. BERLIN is more amused than annoyed. They arrive at the car and his suggestion is met with an appropriate response from HELENA. BERLIN You wanna drive? C'mon we're in a car park, miles from any- where .. There's nothing arou- nd but nothing and sand dunes .. "I can't drive a car." Doesn't like cars. But he's not hearing. C'mon it'll be fun. You can drive me around in circles .. No lady ever had a driving lesson like this before. BERLIN all but sits in her seat. Arm on the back of it. Hand on the wheel. For a split second they're doing 60. Now they're doing about 4. The Mercedes spirals in widening circles. Instructions and enc- ouragement from BERLIN .. O.K. .. Straight now .. The Mercedes straightens and heads through the dunes. "It's a big car park?" We're going along a little track. HELENA may like driving but she doesn't like the sound of that. It's O.K. It's not a public road. Headlights behind them approach quickly. Disappear and reappear as they follow the geography of the dunes. BERLIN only now bec- omes aware of them. one more dip and they slam in. Her anxiety is misinterpreted. He takes the wheel. No problem. Let him pass. The vehicle is right up behind them. As it overtakes HELENA is scared. And still scared even though BERLIN has stopped the car. It's alright, I'm sorry. It was my fault, it wasn't a good idea. HELENA That was the "Hollow Car," John. Just time to see tail lights of a van disappearing in the gloom. BERLIN A Volkswagen van? Are you sure? 60: INT. LIVING ROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. NIGHT. Rain lashes the windows. But a lot of improvements inside. New paint and now carpet. Not a lot of furniture but it looks nice enough. There's even a fire in the grate. BERLIN sits at a tab- le on the phone. The Voice he's hearing will [talk in brackets] BERLIN [Phone] .. [is it a two door, slide door, a what?] I don't know [Well, you gotta get closer than just a V.W. van. You- 're talking maybe 10/15 thousand veh- icles?] What happens if you just run the name "John" against all of them? Heads for a sofa. Paperback of "Hamlet." TV on without sound. [Frankly, that isn't gonna do you any good. You'll be knocking on doors all over the state. You gotta request tho- se "Jennifer" files - maybe something in them, give us some kinda reference?] Christmas ads interrupt the movie. BERLIN sighs in frustration. Starts doodling on the paperback. Shakespeare acquires glasses. I can't request anything right now .. push one more inch, I lose the lot .. [Well, listen, I'll run the Bay Area for you. But if you want a print-out of every John in California with a V. W. van, that's gotta be official. I'm sorry] .. That's O.K. Thank you, Dan .. 61: INT. CHIEF'S OFFICE. POLICE STATION. DAY. A painting of Ronald Reagan fills the screen. So awful it's al- most impressive. Next to it is a formal photograph of the City Mayor (Mr Heineman) . BERLIN continues to wait with eyes switch- ing to a picture of the Taj Mahal. "I love to paint." He turns as CITRINE walks in. "It's not great art, but I change the col- ors." Heads for his desk and sits dispensing with the crutches. CITRINE I'm shutting you down on this "blind thing," John. BERLIN Is that my punishment for embarrassing Mr Heineman? CITRINE Don't underestimate me .. the Mayor's pissed - but that's nothing to do with this - sit down - How many times have you been up at that institute? BERLIN Three or four. CITRINE I'm talking, outside the girl? BERLIN Once. CITRINE Got a letter from this Goodridge guy? Says, you're upsetting his students? BERLIN That's bullshit, CITRINE He says, you freaked one of em out? (Reading the letter) "Asking a newly blind kid if he can 'see,' is both cruel, and dangerous" .. He floats the letter across the desk and hears the explanation. BERLIN I never asked if he could "see." I just asked one or two of the stud- ents if they remembered anything? CITRINE And did they? BERLIN No. CITRINE rubs his forehead in preparation to change the subject, CITRINE I'm not a nasty man, John, I'm a nice man .. I get a lot of Christmas cards (a lot of cards on the wall) .. and I'm getting a lot of complaints. The guy you replaced was something you- 're not - a lazy sonovabitch - but the reality is, I was getting a faster ser- vice outta Popeye than I am outta you .. I can't allow this to continue, John .. If there was any argument to be had BERLIN would be arguing it. I don't want you up at that institute again .. and I'm flat-out about that .. I'm sorry, I know it means something to you - you can go tell your witness if you feel you must - but as far as you're concerned, the case is closed .. 62: EXT. CITY STREET. CITY OF EUREKA. NIGHT. Colored lights strung across the street. Symptoms of Christmas everywhere. Store windows full of trashy decorations and every- thing soluable in mist. ROSS and BERLIN develop out of it like Polaroids. Their destination is a dingy looking downstairs bar. BERLIN God, it pisses me off, Ross. ROSS No God, Brother. If there was a God, asses wouldn't be at the perfect height for kicking. 63: INT. "ANGELA'S BAR." CITY OF EUREKA. NIGHT. This is the local Copper's bar. It's full of cigarette smoke & Coppers. Laughter & sugar music. "I'll Be Seeing You." "Sentim- ental Journey." Either one of these is playing. Familiar Faces among those drinking at the bar. The forty-two-year-old BLONDE serving them is busy. She is in possession of very big breasts. VENABLES Can I buy you a beer, Sergeant? ROSS Don't try and ingratiate your- self with me, Venables. But just this once I'll have a Heineken .. and John here will have one, too. ROSS pokes VENABLES a surreptitious 20 with eyes on the BLONDE. Right now she's far end of the bar delivering a beer to BISLEY. (Look at those Amazingly Bos- oms) You wanna beer, King Jay? TAYLOR No, I gotta go .. I'm nights .. TAYLOR gets a last cough out of a cigarette before stubbing it. BLATTIS Gimme a ride? TAYLOR Sure .. And he's already gathered his shit and halfway into his jacket. How's that hand-job comin along, John? BERLIN makes a gesture he'd have trouble understanding himself. ROSS Hey, we're not talking "talk" tonight. TAYLOR No one's gonna make that Gent. Six months investigation, & the nearest we got, we thought he was a sailor. BERLIN A sailor? By now TAYLOR is moving through the crush of faces behind them. TAYLOR Yeah, in and outta Frisco on the big boats .. Every lead we had went right out to sea .. Night, night, Freddy T .. John .. BERLIN How come he's suddenly so forth- coming? I'd like to kick him right in the ass. If he'd discussed it with me, I mighta gotten somewhere .. ROSS Stop it. BERLIN I never knew about the sailor the- ory, Ross. He might have that one little thing I need in his files? ROSS John, stop it. The case is on its ass, you're closed. (Reaches for a menu.) C'mon, let it go for once .. Have a drink. C'mon, relax, drink your beer .. And just that one moment of insanity as BERLIN downs it in one. Alright .. Let's have some wine .. 64: INT. BOOTH. "ANGELA'S BAR." NIGHT. A shabby booth with black and whites of the two unrecognizable Celebrities who ate here. Hamburgers are almost over and a bot- tle of wine almost drunk. Both look tanked and especially ROSS. ROSS You gotta stop calling Los Angeles .. You're dragging L.A. around with you like an addiction. Look at the shit you're putting yourself through? For what? For nothing, I know it, I been there. Remember me? Up to my asshole in anger, living off the vitamins in cigarettes? If there's a body under the snow, fuck it. Let somebody else worry about it. You gotta accept you stopped living in that world, & try and give yourself a break in this .. BERLIN Just makes to so God damned mad .. ROSS You're a fucking great policeman, but give yourself a break. You're here 5 minutes, you find yourself a fucking homicide? .. Not many people could do that in a place like this .. And you gotta admit, there's a lot of shaky areas in this case? .. I mean, stop me if I'm going up the wrong nostril .. Waving his empty at the bar ROSS communicates need for another. How d'you know this girl isn't lying to you .. Not lying as such, but mak- ing up stuff to keep you coming back? BERLIN She wasn't lying about the van. ROSS Alright, she wasn't lying about the van. But it could have been any van? Any little foreign diesel? .. She's blind, Bro .. It's sad .. She's pro- bably lonely, and you're a nice guy to have around .. But you're getting far too far into the element, Brother .. BERLIN Sure. ROSS You don't need me to tell you what hap- pens when you get emotionally involved? BERLIN Alright, enough, Ross. You'll bring on my "Nervous Tick" ... 65: INT. ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. Very late and the only light comes from coloured bulbs pulsing on a Christmas tree. Apparent BERLIN has had too much to drink. Makes it to his desk and shuffles at the messages. One is just about important enough to get a close-up. "TIME 18:52: SUBJECT: A MAN CALLED DAN STANLEY TELEPHONED: SAYS THERE ARE 109 JOHNS WITH VOLKSWAGEN VANS IN BAY AREA: WILL TELETYPE INFO THIS P.M." 66: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. BERLIN finishes typing something. Tears it out and seals it in an envelope. Shirt sleeves and yawns. He slumps in the chair & stares at "Jennifer 8." Fuck this for a Friday night. He's had enough of it. Grabs several envelopes and turns out the lights. 67: INT. ADMIN/OFFICE. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. BERLIN emerges from one office and heads for another. J.K. Tay- lor on the door. Delivers the envelope and an his way out when something detains him. Lights on the tree strobe through venit- ian blinds. Illuminate bits and pieces of rattan. Plus a board covered in Christmas cards and a pair of steel filing cabinets. Maybe motivated by the booze? But a desk drawer is open almost before he realizes it and he searches for a key. Nothing but a bunch of business cards and family snaps. Taylor with his Moth- er Taylor with his Sister (red hair like him) and Taylor with his Dog. The drawer slams and one underneath opens. Same flot- sam of personal junk. Scotch Tape and paper clips and more bus- iness cards. A bottle of tablets and salad of loose ammo. Fuck all else and he closes the drawer. But what's this? A cane let- ter rack at the rear of the desk where he finds a pair of keys. Excitement lasts as long as it takes to try them. Don't fit ei- ther lock. Now he's staring at the shadows with nothing moving but thoughts. A few moments more and he's heading for the door. 68: INT. OFFICE. POLICE STATION. NIGHT. Massive close-up of the lock. A weird looking tool goes in and another follows it. This bastard ain't easy even for an expert. The frame widens to reveal BERLIN. He shuffles picks in a wall- et on top of the cabinet. Was that a noise somewhere? He stops to listen. wipes cold sweat away. Only thieves and foxes about. A final twist and the lock delivers. Several dozen manilla col- ored files from which to choose. A pair of folders titled Jenn- ifer travel to the desk. The first is full of press-cuttings & some gruesome looking snaps. Next file and this one looks more interesting? A notebook full of random questions/answers/comm- ents. A list of ships and sailing times. "MUST FOLLOW THIS UP" Underlined twice. "CAN'T OVER ESTIMATE IMPORTANCE." Also under- lined. Lists of numbers. Street numbers? Vehicle numbers? What- ever they might be is history because the neon just flashed on. TAYLOR stands in the doorway. The surprise is mutual. The play one-sided. This is already TAYLOR's game. Smokes his cigarette. BERLIN is up to elbows in the jam jar and up to him to explain. BERLIN .. feel like I'm getting close to this guy .. and all the time, feel like I'm sharpening a pencil with a broken load .. I'm sorry, King J .. TAYLOR What are you looking for? BERLIN Vehicle references. TAYLOR Wrong cabinet. He gestures to the right one. BERLIN feels about 2 inches tall. I'm gonna get some coffee. When you finish in here, maybe you'll let me know? .. I got a report to type up .. As he exits he tosses a bunch of keys. They crash uselessly on- to the desk. BERLIN looks like he couldn't get a fuck with mud. 69: EXT. ROAD. TRINITY VALLEY. DAY. The mood is low as it goes. And so is the angle. Ultra low beh- ind the car. Just road and a blur of tires. The frame widens & the Mercedes fills it. Brake lights on as it descends the hill. 70: INT. TRINITY VALLEY/ROAD. DAY. BERLIN in big close-up. His face like the Music. Here come the gates of the Institute. As he turns in he stamps the brakes. A van veers past him. Nothing special about it except it's a V.W. He watches it vanish up the hill with other things on his mind. 71: INT. CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. DAY. Christmas vacations and the building sounds deserted. BERLIN's foot steps might be the only sound in the place. They stop and a bell rings. Ho tries to assemble sox* kind of appropriate ex- pression. But as soon as she opens the door it's obsolete. HEL- ENA looks pretty as flowers & delighted he's here. She reaches for his hands. And every new second makes it a tougher goodbye. 72: INT. APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. DAY. Oh Jesus look at this. She prepared him a surprise dinner. And she looks so happy about it. A pathetic little table with cand- les and Forget-Me-Nots and can of Diet Coke by his plate. He's barely through the door and goodbye is already in deep trouble. HELENA I wanted it to be a surprise. BERLIN's face gets ready for something he doesn't say. Why did she have to do this? And why didn't he tell her over the phone? 73: INT. APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. DUSK. A Schubert Sonata in the background. Candles low and the atmos- phere junk. Evening already in the room and it feels like time to go. But first he's gotta toll her something he doesn't want to hear himself. "Would you like me to make some fresh coffee?" BERLIN I have to talk to you, Helena. HELENA I know. BERLIN You know? How do you know? HELENA Coz you hardly said a word since you got here. But you been thinking pretty loud .. She stands and collects the cups and gets halfway with a smile. I'll make some more coffee. 74: INT. KITCHEN. APARTMENT. DUSK. A hiss of running water. Close on the kettle. Close on the tap. She knows what he's going to say. And now she's alone her face doesn't mask her feelings. She's missing him already. But does- n't know why. Simply knows she doesn't want him to say goodbye. She reaches high into a cupboard. Her shirt stretches over her breasts. Christ this girl has a great figure. Carting hair out of her eyes she returns to the sink. For an instant she's star- ing out of the window and right into somebody's face. Tall and weird looking. But just a glimpse before he moves rapidly away. 75: INT. APARTMENT. DUSK. BERLIN has moved to the sofa. A shaft of dead sunlight crosses the apartment. HELENA comes in making a brave face of it. Does- n't realize he's moved. "I'm here, Helena." And she smiles and changes direction. Puts the coffee tray on a table in front of him. No music now and all sounds in close-up. Close on the lip of the coffee pot as she pours. Close on the cup she gives him. Everything close in Helena's world or her world wouldn't exist. 76: EXT. (P.O.V. FROM FIRE ESCAPE) INSTITUTE. DUSK. Not a lot to look at but the man is looking in. From his P.O.V. he's fortunate. HELENA sits facing him but BERLIN has his back to the window. This sort of surveillance is always ominous and here is no exception. BERLIN's explanation comes with occasion- al use of hands. HELENA suddenly smiles so it can't be all bad. They stand and BERLIN reaches for his coat. HELENA crosses the room. Finds her Forget-Me-Nots and now they're his at the door. As he takes them he takes her hand. Kisses her finger tips and can't avoid embracing her. They kiss like awkward kids bumping noses. Finally part and disappear into the dark of the hallway. 77: INT. ELEVATOR/CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. DUSK. BERLIN is already in the elevator. Resists doors determined to separate them. They shunt in and out perpetually informing him he's on the 4th floor. "I'll call, O.K." She nods and releases his hand. He watches her walk all the way back up the corridor. 78: INT. MERCEDES SEDAN. TRINITY VALLEY. NIGHT. Headlights follow the meandering road. Another bend and lights in the distance. In seconds he's passing the Diner. Still open with cars out front including the white Volkswagen that nearly busted his fender. He's not gonna stop. Then decides to. Makes a U and pulls in. Parks a couple of vehicles away from the van. 79: INT. KITCHEN/LIVING ROOM/BEDROOM. APARTMENT. NIGHT. HELENA finishes the dishes. Stacks a last plate and closes the cupboard. Heads back into the living room. Something about the apartment doesn't sound right? She follows the noise through a door into a bedroom. Curtains dance in the darkness and behind them she finds a half open window. Curious because she doesn't remember leaving it open? Secures it and silences the icy wind. 80: EXT. VOLKSWAGEN VAN/CAR PARK. DINER. NIGHT. BERLIN checks the driver's door. Locked and he explores with a pencil-flashlight. Moves to a slide door at the side. Simultan- eously the door to the Diner opens releasing a quartet of midd- le-aged Drunks. He dissolves while they bullshit around. Laugh- ter in chill air. The Comedian of the night keeps himself amus- ed. Jokes about getting into the wrong car with the wrong wife. BERLIN isn't laughing "C'mon, you drunken fuck. Get outta here." 81: INT/EXT. VOLKSWAGEN VAN/CAR PARK. DINER. NIGHT. A slide door rolls open and BERLIN peers in. Full of furniture and cardboard crates stenciled "TRINITY INSTITUTE - CRAFT DEPT." Worth the try but forget it. This bastard obviously has legit- imate business at the institute. Takes a last poke around with the light. Spots something red. A cigarette butt caked in lip- stick. But what's this white stuff? Some kind of powder spills from a capsule crushed in the door rails. He picks it up for a look and gets a bad one from behind! "Whatta you doing, Mister?" BERLIN finds himself facing an irate looking Woman in her 20's. A lot of red hair and freckles. But definitely more frightened than angry. His Police Department badge is an instant sedative. Gives her some crap about thefts from vehicles round here. She should keep her doors locked. She smiles and thought they were. BERLIN Got your driver's license? She hands it across and he inspects it coz that's what cops do. I noticed you coming outta the institute. You up there a lot? WOMAN Oh, it was you that nearly ran into me? BERLIN No, it was you that nearly ran into me .. You up there a lot? WOMAN I guess, more than usual this time of the year. My mother & I run an Arts & Crafts center, we buy a lot from the institutes .. BERLIN Where's your store, Amanda? WOMAN Oakland. Hands the license back and is already heading for his Mercedes. BERLIN Next pit-stop, you make sure your doors are locked. Merry Christmas. 82: INT. BATHROOM/LIVING ROOM. APARTMENT. NIGHT. If there's moonlight that's the only light. Nothing to see but a pair of large taps. Nothing to hear but a bath filling. Then something starts bleeping. It's a liquid-level-indicator activ- ated by rising water. A hand searches for taps. Shuts them off and silences the indicator. The frame expands to reveal HELENA. She moves to a hand basin. Finds a brush and fixes hair. Finds a clip and pins it up. Close as she kicks off shoes. Pantyhose descend on top of them. Walks into the living room unbuttoning her shirt. Vanishes into the bedroom and the Camera waits. Ret- urns with towels and the Camera follows back into the bathroom. A creaking hinge as she closes the door. A dressing gown hangs on a hook. She reaches for it and turns and virtually bumps in- to the Sonovabitch. Dressed in black and stealthy as a cat. He retreats a pace deeper into the darkness. Just enough light to see he wears glasses. And just enough light to see her undress. HELENA unzips her skirt. Slides it down her lags. Drapes it on a chair. Removes her shirt and hangs it on the back. She wears a white brassiere and panties. And no apologies for repetition. This is a fantastic body. She checks water temperature. Either too hot or too cold. Either way a tap goes on. Now she reaches behind her back. Unclips her bra. Gets hit with dazzling light. The Intruder is taking photographs. And if this is his turn-on he's in paradise. She stands in front of him in total oblivion. Her panties join clothes on the chair. Nov she's naked and now another picture. Again the bathroom detonates with white light. His face is concealed by the camera. But this bastard is about to run out of luck. Moves in as she silences the tap. Suddenly a lot of silence about. HELENA twists in panic. She just heard something? Didn't she just hear something? Is somebody in here? Fear kills her scream. She hits at the darkness. But he's gone. 83: INT. LIVING ROOM/KITCHEN. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. Big close on telephone ringing. No one home except the machine and Camera. The former answers on behalf of Berlin [John, it's me .. please call me .. I left two messages at the police stat- ion .. they said you weren't there .. please, please, call me]. The camera moves on. Breakfast remains on the table. Newspaper still in its wraps. Out the window a bonfire rages in the yard. 84: EXT. YARD. HOUSE. DAY. BERLIN clears rubbish from the garage. Grime and sweat and the effort's got him breathless. Heaves another armful on the fire. The phone starts ringing again. This time he decides to answer. 85: INT. CORRIDOR/ADMIN. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN in a hurry to get there. Footsteps tell the story. Fast up a corridor and through a door. Faces look as he crosses the department. SECRETARIES and BISLEY and ROSS. But only one face of interest. TAYLOR turns halfway through lighting a cigarette. "Are you outta your fucken mind?" TAYLOR says nothing. "If any- thing happens to that girl, I'm gonna break your fucking back." TAYLOR Just easy on the words you're putting in my face, Sergeant .. ROSS Whass going on here? A question practically every expression in the place is asking. TAYLOR His blind friend got "attacked." Angelo went up there, and some- how, it got itself in the paper. BERLIN You put it in there. TAYLOR I may have said some- thing. I don't recall. BERLIN Don't lie, Taylor. I just had this Blattis guy on the phone asking me for a comment - you gave him the whole damned case! TAYLOR Alright, I gave him the case? .. So the case is closed, so what? His indifference inflames BERLIN. Smashes the newspaper at him. BERLIN So read it! You just hung a target around her neck! TAYLOR Bullshit. BERLIN Don't you know nothing about this guy? He reads the newspapers. Col- lects the cuttings. When are they gonna find her? Now he's reading Helena Robertson's name, phrased like she's a fucking witness. You couldn't have done anything more stupid if you'd sat down & tried .. TAYLOR Hey, c'mon, country boys, let's all line up and hear the expert. BERLIN Just walk away from me, Taylor .. Now the volume is going up. Now the whole department is silent. TAYLOR You think you're the only guy ever worked a homicide? I was a big-city cop too. And I bust- ed the clock on fucken Jennifer. I know more about this man than you'll over know - and that's how I know it ain't him - you- 're investigating a soap-opera .. ROSS Alright, guys. We stop this now. TAYLOR He tells her, "bye-bye," and she gets "attacked." Well, give me a fucking break! There is no "Ser- ial Killer." Stick her name up in neon, there's still no Serial kil- ler! And I ain't the only one say- ing it. Everyone in this building is saying it. And I mean everyone. "Everyone" means ROSS. BERLIN looks at him. And his gaze hurts. ROSS Shut up, King Jay .. TAYLOR No, c'mon, Freddy, let's have this out & over. You know what everyone thinks? They think you're making a case coz you found yourself a nice piece of ass. And no one's blaming you for it, I hear she's worth the flowers. But don't come in here get- ting holy over us. Sure I put it in the paper. Coz I wanted to stop this bullshit. I don't want you drunk out- ta your head searching my office ag- ain. it's pissing me, & everyone off. BERLIN You don't know what you done, Taylor. TAYLOR If, your friend from San Diego was up here, and thought for one out of two fucken seconds, she was a danger to him, he'da taken her out weeks ago .. His cigarette is already stubbed and he's already walking away. Why don't you get yourself a dict- ionary? Look up the word "witness?" BERLIN I know what a "witness" is. TAYLOR Well, her, it ain't. That bitch is blind as a blonde fucken bat. A big mistake Mister Taylor. Mister Berlin suddenly turns into Harrison Ford. TAYLOR slams into filing cabinets right next to the Christmas tree. Gets BERLIN's forearm under his throat and fucking lucky not to get the knuckles in his gut. Both men are heaving. No volume necessary in this room of paralyzed silence. BERLIN I'm gonna do something you never did, Taylor. I'm gonna catch this bastard. And when I do, he's gon- na find out just how good a "wit- ness" she is .. Meanwhile, you be aware of me - coz I wish you ill .. BERLIN moves away and the silence is brutal. Nothing happening but bad vibes. ROSS and BERLIN exchange glances, And this shit is really bad. BERLIN vanishes into his lab and the door slams. 86: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN and his Dummy wearing a bra and his photographs and his rage are all alone. And that's how they wanna be. But the door opens and here is ROSS. Have to be a friend to survive in here. BERLIN Nothing you gotta say do I wanna hear right now. So save yourself saying it. ROSS I'm not in here to apologize, John. I told you what was gonna happen & it's happened? "Good-bye, Princess," & the same night she gets attacked? That's a tough one to swallow, Bro? BERLIN I'm already familiar with Taylor's opinion. ROSS You don't really believe this? BERLIN One hundred fucking per cent! .. And you know why? Coz I never told her good-bye. O.K.? Is that good enough for the "committee?" And as long as you like evaporates before ROSS can speak again. ROSS Well .. I didn't know that .. BERLIN No .. You didn't know that .. BERLIN is drinking whisky. Sticks another slug in the cup. Now realizes whose bottle this is. Slams it somewhere on the bench. Here. You left your booze in here. ROSS Who d'you think it was? Ross gets the kind of smile a smart guy wouldn't give an idiot. You think it was him? BERLIN That's a very stupid question, Ross. ROSS I'm asking it. BERLIN How the hell do I know who? Some jerk-off. Some peeping-tom prick. His hand has found the switch-blade. A nasty click as it opens. .. but definitely not him. This guy's in the trade. He's not gon- na stand there looking at her ass, if he's in the room, she's dead .. BERLIN puts the knife in his Dummy. If she's alive. She's dead. ROSS Ease off, John .. BERLIN I'm sick of this toy town shit. ROSS Everything you say sounds reason- able. But there's also a reason- able explanation for the opposite. BERLIN Don't give me that! Not another word! When you had the Fat Lady in there, and I asked you if she was lying, you looked me right in the eyes and said yes. So as far as I was concerned, she's ly- ing. And if the King of fucking England had walked in & told me different, I wouldn't have bel- ieved him - because you told me .. This atmosphere would stretch any friendship to breaking point. And now I'm telling you. I'm looking you right in the eyes and telling ya, there's a "bad man" out there, and I don't know if he's in the next room, or the next state: and I don't know what his trigger is? But if he reads her name in the newspaper, I believe he'll be inclined to do something ab- out it. I've got a bad feeling. And I been doing this too long to be wrong. There are tough eyes to look into. And ROSS finally looks away. ROSS I dunno what I can do to help you? BERLIN I dunno what I'd do with your help. I've gotta take her out of there .. ROSS What about Citrine? BERLIN Screw Citrine. He can fire me. 87: EXT. LANDSCAPE. COUNTRY ROAD. DAY. Wide over the countryside. The car is a long way off. A pretty magic looking dawn. Cows on hills and mist in the hollows. The Mercedes finally arrives. Up the track and into the (refurbish- ed) garage. Engine off and little but a sound of singing birds. 88: INT. LIVING ROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. HELENA sits on the sofa. She's a lousy liar and having a tough time with the phone " .. my aunt called twice .. well, soon, I hope so .. right now, I'm scared to be there .. who? .. just a second .. O.K. .. just a second.. Goodridge wants the number?" She seeks decision from BERLIN who doesn't want him to have it. HELENA (Phone) Mr Goodridge? .. I can't find it .. No .. there's no one here to read it right now .. Well, yes, I know .. of course I will .. yes, promise .. I'll get it and call you tomorrow .. And that's it except for "Goodbyes." He takes the phone and re- places it. Her expression is a toss up between guilt & anxiety. I feel really bad about it, coz they invited me for Christmas .. BERLIN Has he got your aunt's address? HELENA I don't think so .. He said the police had been calling .. want- ed to ask me some more questions .. BERLIN Who? (She doesn't know) Probably Angelo .. I'll take care of it .. Don't worry, we- 're gonna find this guy, and everything'll be O.K. .. O.K.? Only thing he fails to mention is which guy he's talking about. Anyway the subject is already changed. He notices tapes in her bag. "Would you like me to put your music on?" No, she doesn't want music. O.K. He's gonna light the fire and make them lunch. 99: EXT. WOODSHED. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. BERLIN is splitting logs and HELENA is sitting an a step "watch- ing" him. She's looking almost happy with only worry in the way. BERLIN You're looking worried again, Helena? HELENA No I'm not. BERLIN You're looking more worried now than when you "decided to stop worrying"? HELENA Alright, I'm worried about Christmas. I wish I hadn't told him I'd be back .. A log tangents off. BERLIN retrieves it. Tosses it in a barrow. BERLIN He'll get over it. I'll roast us a chicken, O.K. With cand- les around it. How about that? A distant owl hoots. She knows he's smiling. She's smiling too. HELENA Wouldn't it be better if I cook it? You said, you can only boil? 90: INT. LIVING ROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. The Music is Puccini. Part one/Act two/The Humming Chorus from Madam Butterfly. Giant close of the spinning cassette. The Cam- era remains close as it explores the room. Candle light & fire- light. Along a mantlepiece. Eleven thirty-five on a clock. Two Christmas cards. Several photographs from the happy years. One a picture of Ross & Berlin in uniform. Another features Berlin with his arm around a beautiful young lady with long dark hair. For a moment it could be Helena? But the Camera's already gone. HELENA cuddles knees in the corner of a sofa. Looks considerab- ly more relaxed. But there's a tension here and both are aware of it. Stifled yawns. She stares at him and BERLIN stares back. A billion people in love have been through this. It's bed-time. [A suggestion of Berlin's bed to be is heaped in pillows/blank- ets at the end of the couch.] "Come on, I'll take you up there." She finds his hand and stands. The Music follows them upstairs. 91: INT. BEDROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. Moonlight through the windows. They are silhouettes. They want to embrace but in a situation like this a bedroom is the worst place to be. No sound except the Music. And what's anyone supp- osed to say? This atmosphere is about kissing and nothing more. Christ hear this Music. A sweet pulse of Puccini. Big close of lips meeting in moonlight. Now in each other's arms. They kiss. And then they're kissing. And nothing else is happening in the whole fucking universe except a telephone just started to ring. Still ringing. Still kissing. Somebody has got to give in. The phone finally gets answered. The voice at the end isn't expect- ed. But BERLIN sounds pleased to hear it. It seems one problem got solved. "I gotta tell you, Margie. You are Mrs Santa Claus." 92: INT/EXT. KITCHEN/REAR ENTRANCE. ROSS'S HOUSE. DAY. Is Ross throwing a party or opening a bar? Crates of booze and stack upon stack of beer. A bit of "where do you want it?" act- ing from BERLIN as he staggers in with a delivery of Bud. ROSS makes room on a table. Rips a beer out the plastic and pops it. BERLIN Can't thank you enough, Ross .. ROSS Don't thank me. Thank Margie. Swallowing beer ROSS exits the back door with BERLIN following. It's her invitation. And as far as Citrine in concerned, better we keep it like that. The wagon waits outside with a few crates left to unload, BER- LIN heads for his Mercedes with ROSS calling after him. "John. Here." Pulls a six pack from his supplies and throws it across. There's an old desperado in one of the cells. Why don't you give him this, and tell him happy Christmas from me? 93: INT. BEDROOM. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. The Girls prepare for festivity. They got a full length mirror. A wardrobe of dresses. A menu of shoes, What they do with them in this scene is their affair. Right now MARGIE's holding some blue number in front of HELENA."It's blue silk. You like blue?" MARGIE Not "you" blue. This isn't you. She slings the dress on the bed. It joins a pile of rehearsals. Moves deeper into her dresses and HELENA appears in the mirror. HELENA When did John divorce? MARGIE Two or three years ago. HELENA What was she like? MARGIE Suzanne? Very pretty. She was a semi- professional model. But a policeman's wife she wasn't. So one day, she just packed it and left. And his whole life went straight down the nearest toilet. HELENA What does that mean? MARGIE You know, he crashed. He just couldn't come to terms with it .. John hates to lose, and he hated losing her .. Every spare minute, he's driving down to San Diego, having a terrible time with her, getting drunk, and driving back .. you just don't believe the amount he drank .. She pirouettes with black sequins. "What do you think of black?" Evidently not much and MARGIE is getting short of alternatives. Wait a minute, I just had the most brilliant idea .. HELENA You think he still loves her? MARGIE Think he still thinks about her. But not like then. Then was an obsession. She emerges from the wardrobe with red satin high heeled shoes. Here .. try these .. if these fit, we got the perfect dress .. HELENA I haven't worn heels since I was 16. I don't think I could walk in these? MARGIE Sure you can. Anyway, parties are all about standing still .. HELENA is excited to try them out. The experiment is a success. I'll go get the dress .. It's kinda sultry .. I only wore it once, coz in reality, I can't get away with it .. HELENA You think John would like it? MARGIE I think John, would love it ... 94: EXT. HOUSE. NIGHT. The Ross residence looks like an ad for J&B. Warm yellow light from the windows. Holly wreath on the front door. The Mercedes pulls up and BERLIN gets out with his bag and suit on a hanger. A hard wind around the house. He walks inside without knocking. 95: INT. DEN. HOUSE. NIGHT. The den looks like a little museum. Walls decorated with Civil War memorabilia. One wall occupied by a cabinet of modern guns. ROSS looks like Roy Rogers trying to look like Fred Astaire. A powder blue evening suit. Ho dumps ice in a barrel full of Bud- wieser and BERLIN produces a couple of presents. "This is from Helena. And this is from me." The first obviously a music tape. ROSS holds it to his ear. "Sounds like Frank Sinatra?" And the second a bottle of (Ross tears the wrappings off) Chivas Regal! ROSS Let's do one of these right now, then we'll hide the sonovabitch. But he's already lost BERLIN's attention. MARGIE walks in with HELENA. Jesus what have you done to her? Bright red lipstick & jet black mascara and dress made of blood red sequins. Sexy it is but her it isn't. She looks like one of those big tit dopes from Tennessee. She also looks like 37 million dollars. Christ that smile works with paint. An appraisal comes from ROSS "Wow." 96: INT. LIVING ROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. The whole house is going around in a haze of booze and colored lights and laughter. Buddy Holly supplies the music "True Love Ways" and ROSS is a victim of the nostalgia. Dances close with MARGIE. Among the kaleidoscope of passing couples are HELENA & BERLIN. Eyes closed and oblivious of everything but each other. But someone is staring at them. About forty years old with big hands. Too old for acne but the skin is bad. Got a scar on his cheek like a ladder in a stocking. He continues to stare until the dancers separate. Music ends and he's already in the crowd. BERLIN arrives with a whisper for MARGIE and next thing HELENA is on her arm heading for the stairs. Obviously a "ladies room" run. Everly Brothers next record up and SERATO appears through the crush. Spots ROSS who wants to know "What happened to you?" SERATO Duty Sergeant fucked up .. can you believe it, I'm on tonight .. "How long have you got?" "One big drink." And they head for it. Did you get my message? BERLIN No. SERATO I left a message on your machine. It wasn't me calling. Sam around? This last question to ROSS who delivers a typically large shot. ROSS Yeah .. I guess she's in the kit- chen .. We got a so-called prof- essional cook out there having a nervous breakdown over a turkey .. BERLIN Are you sure you didn't call? SERATO I spoke to old whass-his-name a couple of times. But not to her, and I never asked for her .. ROSS Her who? BERLIN Someone's calling the institute to talk to Helena. Says he wants to ask her some more questions .. SERATO Not guilty .. And he pushes off to see his wife. BERLIN looks around worried. BERLIN You got a quiet phone somewhere? ROSS Hey, John, don't start getting antsy over this tonight. It may well have been the local cops? BERLIN That's just what I wanna find out. 97: INT. BATHROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. MARGIE fixes HELENA's lips. Big on the lipstick. Another layer of magenta is going on "Are you sure I look O.K." Her question interrupts the Revlon "You're the prettiest girl here by about two hundred per cent." MARGIE moves in again for the lower lip. MARGIE How you doing on those shoes? HELENA Don't mix very well with beer. Perhaps she is a tiny bit tipsy? MARGIE smiles and says "Press." MARGIE Girl like you should be drinking chill white wine. Press. All done. A knock on the door. "Come in" and BOBBY sticks his head inside. BOBBY That woman in the kitchen says if she doesn't get help within 10 seconds, she's gonna resign. MARGIE That woman is a disaster ... She turns to the mirror in exasperation and mends her own face. Alright, tell her I'm coming. No, wait a minute, honey. Take Helena for me, and find John? And don't let go of her hand until you do .. INT. LIVING ROOM/DEN. HOUSE. NIGHT. A pause in the Music amplifies conversation. Bullshit and beer and everyone talking about nothing. BOBBY leads HELENA through the row. Can't find Berlin and now they're in the den. The ser- ious Guzzlers have made it base. Everyone talking and everyone lying but no Berlin and BOBBY is about to make a major mistake. BOBBY I'll just go see if he's in the kitchen .. you stay right here .. Her protest is absorbed in sound. And anyway he's already gone. At once she is vulnerable. Doesn't know if she's staring at the back of a head or straight into someone's face. "Didn't we meet somewhere?" The question comes from the man with the scar. He's drunk as a dog and already got a tattooed hand around her waist. VENABLES Hey, Popeye! POPEYE Hey, Fat Guy! Gimme 2 minutes. I'm about to ask this lady for a dance? Trash aftershave and lousy breath and clearly the answer is no. If I told you I'd driven all the way from Oakland would you dance with me? Willy Nelson starts to sing. And HELENA attempts to break away. What's so special about the other guy? You like cops, don't you .. I'm a cop .. HELENA finds the top of a couch. Holds it like a raft of secur- ity. But where ever she goes this frightful mouth is following. .. let me ask you a question? How do you know the difference between one guy and another? .. Maybe you don't .. Maybe you only know the "difference" when you're dancing? (he laughs) If you knew what I looked like, you'd dance with me. I look like John Wayne .. HELENA I know what you look like. Excuse me. She navigates the back of the sofa. Collides with somebody and apologizes. "I'm sorry. Is anyone sitting there?" Enough ambiv- alence in the question for the guy not to know she's blind. No. No one sitting there. Simultaneously a pair of middle-age crew cuts occupy the sofa. A second later HELENA sits bang into one of the laps. Spilt drinks and surprise all round. Pleasant sur- prise for the victim. He's a lecherous looking old bastard and Helena's dress rides up for a damned good view of the lingerie. FLESHY VOICE Happy Christmas, Max ... MAX I normally get socks ... Every humiliation there is. However HELENA gets out of this is however she achieves it. But by the time she does she's crying. 99: INT. HALLWAY/STAIRS. HOUSE. NIGHT. A calm spot between kitchen & stairs. In the background Guests raid the kitchen for food. BERLIN looks like he should be smok- ing a cigarette. At last MARGIE comes downstairs with the news. MARGIE She wants to go back to the institute .. ROSS already arrived. BERLIN looks desolate. She can't go back. You better go talk to her .. ROSS watches him walk upstairs. His eyes an assessment of this absurd relationship. "All sorts of people fall in love, Darlin." ROSS I know .. ain't it a shame .. 100: INT. BEDROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. A wedge of light as BERLIN walks in. Then moonlight again. HEL- ENA sits at the edge of a single bed. Hair a wreck and mascara streaks down her face. He sits identifying himself with an emb- race. Clears the hair from her eyes and kisses where the tears were. "It was an accident .. everyone has accidents." Whatever he said would be the wrong thing to say. Because he doesn't un- derstand. And her only explanation of this misery is new tears. HELENA I can't walk in these shoes .. Gently he reaches down and takes off her shoos "You don't have to dress like this for me." And suddenly the mood is different. He is amongst her tears. Kissing her mouth. Already undressing her. Her dress glides up. Silk stockings. He unclips them. She feels his hands drift down her legs. Hears the zip opening her dress. She returns his desire and helps him with her brassiere. He kisses her breasts and by now the Camera's too close to see. 101: INT. BEDROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. HELENA asleep in BERLIN's arms. Just the worry of the wind. He kisses her and slips out of bed and everything slams into MASS- IVE CLOSE-UP. PLUS A MASSIVE AMPLIFICATION OF SOUND. THE SLIDE SNAPS BACK ON A 9 MILL BERETTA. THE MAGAZINE SHUNTS OUT. SLUGS LOADED AND MAG BACK IN. THE SLIDE TRAVELS FORWARD BIG AS A CAR. BERLIN is fully dressed. Geared up for work. Black leather glo- ves and black leather jacket. Shoves the Beretta into his belt. From somewhere a very soft sound of Christmas carols drifts in. 102: INT. STAIRS/LIVING ROOM/DEN. HOUSE. NIGHT. This is deep past midnight, The house is quiet and gone to bed. Fallout from the party everywhere. Still that distant sound of carols. BERLIN dumps his bag and walks into the den. Just dark- ness and the forgotten tape machine. Flips on a lamp and tries to open the gun cabinet. Still trying when startled by a voice. ROSS (O.S.) You can't get in there .. That's "Comanche Proof." BERLIN swings round in surprise. ROSS is half asleep on a sofa. BERLIN Jesus. What are you doin? ROSS I spose I'm drinking myself to sleep. It's Helena's Christmas songs .. they're really pretty .. "Silent Night. Holy Night" and about two inches of Chivas left. BERLIN Have you got any Glasers? (Ross does) Twenty fives? BERLIN sticks a foot on a table. Pulls a .25 Walther automatic from an ankle holster. Ejects the mag and clicks out the slugs. ROSS What exactly you doing, John? BERLIN I'm going up to the institute. ROSS Now? BERLIN This "cop" that's calling, thinks she gonna be there over Christmas. ROSS unlocks a cabinet and BERLIN is about to load the Glasers. I checked with the locals and our station, no one's called. Whoever it is, isn't the police. I think this bastard's getting worried ab- out something? .. and I think the- re's just a chance he'll turn up. ROSS Well, let's hope he does .. ROSS selects a 12 gauge Winchester and rams the mechanism open. And if he does, I'm gonna drop a bomb on the fukker. BERLIN Listen, you don't havta come? ROSS Hey .. ROSS is stuffing solid lead "car killers" into the pump action. Watch my lips. I'm your partner. 103: EXT. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. NIGHT. This is probably a crane shot. A gale works up the valley. The institute is in total darkness. Not a vehicle out front. Not a sound except the marauding wind. Ross's Chevrolet is concealed amongst trees. Been here long enough to allow slow flurries to accumulate. It stares towards the building maybe 75 yards away. 104: INT. CHEVROLET SEDAN. NIGHT. BERLIN wears a black wool hat. ROSS a big black overcoat. Both got shit frozen out of them. A bottle available and anyone who wants a slug better help himself. Plus sleet on the windshield and a lot of stale time. BERLIN asks what time it is? And ROSS takes a heave on the booze and waits for about a week to go by. ROSS Where's your watch? BERLIN I guess by the bed. ROSS It's twenty of three. Yawns do a circuit. ROSS flops in his seat and the angle chang- es. The view from the rear covers windscreen and back of heads. A little young for you, Bro? (Gets his eyes) You think if she could see, she'd be hanging around with an old dog like you? You got a stomach growing around to meet itself behind your back. BERLIN Bull shit .. I'm in my prime .. ROSS Bits. BERLIN What d'you mean, "bits." A star-light on the windshield. Distant and nobody seen it yet. ROSS Policemen's bodies age at diff- erent rates. Look at me. Gut in its fifties. Balls in their six- ties. And feet in their eighties .. BERLIN Hit those wipers, Ross. Urgency snaps him into close-up. Big noise as wipers clear the screen. "I thought I saw a light?" BERLIN stares at the instit- ute through small binoculars. "There. Flashlight went right ac- ross those windows!" Instant excitement as the adrenalin pumps in. "Fourth floor. See it? He's fucken in there!" And suddenly everything including super-sinister Music is happening at once. 105: EXT. CHEVROLET. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Pines singing as the gale tears into them. Clutching his Winch- ester ROSS opens the trunk. A dim light and a fluster of equip- ment. BERLIN sorts out a pair of radios. Selects a channel and ROSS whispers "What are you on?" ("local Tac.") Here come huge 12 cell flashlights and the intense whispers continue. "Local?" ROSS What if we need a back up? BERLIN We're not here. I don't want the desk to hear us .. O.K. it's channel 4 and copy? And they're already on their way. 106: EXT. BACK OF BUILDING. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. The storm bullies its way around the building. Lights approach quickly. But one of them is already fading. It belongs to ROSS. This fucker's got about 5 minutes in it. And whatever the plan was it just got changed. BERLIN looks around in apprehension - going in there alone ain't no joy - his flashlight ascends the fire escape. And there it is 2 floors up. A half opened window. BERLIN Alright. I'll start at the top, and work down. ROSS You ain't going in alone? BERLIN That's a liability, Ross. I don't want you hanging on to my shirt. Anyone but me comes down these stairs, take em out but try and keep him alive. I want this bastard living .. Takes off up the stairs. ROSS watches him vanish. (Waiting out here ain't so tasty either.) The wind rages in nearby trees. A door slams repeatedly somewhere a long way away. [Ross?] "10/2" [I'm going in.] Big on ROSS and the radio. "You take care, Bro." 107: INT. REAR STAIRWELL. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. BERLIN climbs through the window. Drops down and waits to orien- tate himself. He's on a small landing midway between flights of stairs. Different kinds of noises in here. One hundred per cent more sinister. "Ross. Ross? You hearing me?" [10/2]. "I'm going upstairs." Snaps the safety-catch on his Beretta. And it sounds ominous. Every shadow in this place is animated with foreboding. 108: INT. STAIRWELL/CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Looking down the stairwell. The light comes up. BERLIN arrives on another floor. Hard to sweat in here but he's doing it. His progress is distinctly cautious. A harsh wind rockets down the stairs flapping a pair of owing doors. BERLIN eases through in- to the corridor. At its far end is the elevator. He travels to- wards it in an eerie piston of light. [John? What's happening?] 109: EXT. REAR OF INSTITUTE. NIGHT. ROSS has moved into the shelter of a wall. Sleet passes almost horizontally. His flashlight is over. The color of a tangerine. ROSS [BERLIN] [I'm on Helena's floor .. I'm just gonna take a look at her apartment .. You O.K.] Fucken flashlight's kaput .. [Door's locked .. shit] What's happen- ing, Brother? [I can hear some- thing? .. Something upstairs?] 110: INT. CORRIDOR. INSTITUTE. NlGHT. BERLIN stares up at the coiling "I can hear footsteps .. right up above?" They disappear into the gale. Doors beat at the end of the corridor. He moves towards them and pushes out onto the stairway. Nothing but the wind. He's about to climb when an al- arming voice shocks him rigid. "YOU ARE NOW ON THE THIRD FLOOR." BERLIN is already running. Light swinging wildly as he sprints back up the corridor. Fifteen yards to elevator/stairs. Breath- less as hell he hits the radio. "Fucker's in the elevator." Al- most jumps stairs in haste. Bursts out onto the 3rd floor. Ham- mer back on the Beretta. Just in time to see the doors closing. "Get ready, Ross. He maybe coming down." But he isn't. He's go- ing up. By the time he's recovered breath the Voice is back in business. Whoever rides the elevator is now on the fifth floor. 111: INT. STAIRWELL. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Totally breathless now. Eyes ascend faster than feet. Whine of a swinging door. BERLIN rounds the stairwell. The door's still busy. Top of the building here and the ceilings are closing in. BERLIN'S P.O.V. as he heads for that door. Closer. Three steps to go. Closer. Two steps more. One step. Reaches for it. Whamm! The door smashes into him like it hates him. So fast it hardly happened. He staggers back. His flashlight clatters downstairs. Banisters capsize as the light passes. Every shadow goes crazy. The flashlight arrives at a lower level. Rolls away and stops. Wastes power into a corner. Can't see Berlin and can't see his radio. But Ross cuts into the silence with increasing disquiet. [John? John? Are you al- right? .. Come in, John?] 112: EXT. REAR OF INSTITUTE/FIRE ESCAPE. NIGHT. ROSS savaged by the gale. In considerable anxiety. Less than a volt in his batteries. His failure to contact Berlin accelerat- es his concern by the moment. Calls repeatedly "You hearing me?" Big close on the radio. Fingers switch channels. Tries calling on five/six. Still nothing and goes to channel eight. "Come in, John?" Alright fuck it. Light or no light. He's going up there. Still calling he barges at the wind making for the fire escape. [You hear me? Just be care- ful now, coz I'm coming up] Stares up into the gloom of the iron stairs. Hardly got a foot on the first before a Figure rushes down. Dressed in black and very breathless. A powerful flashlight floods on dazzling ROSS. Is that you, John? .. Ans- wer. NOW .. Or I blow this fucken staircase to pieces. BERLIN [?] Me, Freddy. Thank Jesus the anxiety's over. The 12 gauge drops to his side. ROSS What the hell's going on up there, Brother? I been calling 10 minutes. The light remains steady and blinding and straight in his face. Hey, c'mon, John .. Talk to me ... Just the sound of breathlessness. Plus a .25 Walther automatic. Jesus Christ .. What are you doing? It glints at the peripheries of his vision and ROSS is alarmed. What the fuck are you doing? - It's me - Holy shit! - John - John - Not you - Don't shoot you crazy bastard! Two deathly flashes in quick succession. The first practically taken Ross's hand off. The second slams into his guts and he's down. The Glaser is unequalled in ferocity by any other bullet. 113: EXT. FIRE ESCAPE (ATTIC LEVEL). INSTITUTE. NIGHT. The MYOPIC JANITOR looks down. Five floors below a man lays on his back. His shotgun discharges uselessly into trees. Another man leans over him. Illuminates his agonized face with a flash- light. Shoots him again point-blank in the upper body. The MYO- PIC isn't staying for more. Hurries back along the fire escape. 114: INT. ATTIC APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Wind breaks on the roof like waves. An utterly dismal room lit by a starving light bulb. The MYOPIC arrives from the fire esc- ape. Huge eyes behind those orb-like glasses. Picks up a phone and dials. Piles and piles of old newspapers. Hundreds of fuck magazines. In the kitchen section a mass of photographic equip- ment includes an enlarger on the table a flash camera. On the wall behind him a collage of snaps of half dressed girls. Plus a special enlargement of Helena standing naked in her bathroom. MYOPIC Gimme the police. Quickly. 115: EXT. REAR OF INSTITUTE. FIRE ESCAPE. NIGHT. Close on a bulb in a flashlight. The merest glimmer of energy. Barely the light to see the blood. It seeps into a long-frozen footprint in the ice. Fills it fast and expands over the sides. Somebody say this can't be happening? BERLIN crumples to knees in the snow. Dumps his light gasping for breath. Oblique light creating desperate silhouettes. BERLIN howls like a dog. Howls into his radio. "Nine - Nine - Nine." Blood all over his hands. "This is a Nine - Nine - Nine - officer down." ROSS is heaving like an old bull elephant. On the verge of unconsciousness. He tries to speak. Got hit in the throat. BERLIN fights off tears. "Don't talk old man." Repeats the emergency code but this time he can't be heard. Almost imperceptibly a Carol filters in (In The Bleak Mid Winter) and the Camera moves slowly away. BERLIN cradles ROSS's tragic head and the song drowns the raging wind. This beautiful Christmas carol will articulate rhythm of these cuts. And there will be no other sound until the sequence ends. 116: EXT. CITY STREET. CITY HOSPITAL. NIGHT. A blue emergency light. Revolving in slow motion. Like a dream. The city streets are a blur. The light accelerates into sudden reality. Ambulance plus police convoy speed to a city hospital. 117: INT. EMERGENCY ROOM. HOSPITAL. NIGHT. Close-up of MARGIE kissing her husband's lips for the last time. Tears spill down his cheeks from her eyes. FREDDY ROSS is dead. 118: INT. WAITING AREA. HOSPITAL. NIGHT. Outside in the corridor. Looking in at BERLIN. He sits head in hands on a bench. This is somebody's point of view. The camera travels up the windows. Waits at a distance as CITRINE arrives. Pajamas under his clothes. He walks with assistance of a stick. Neither say anything because both know what this is about. BER- LIN stands and hands over his badge. Exits the mag and now his Beretta. A brief word from CITRINE and he turns and walks away. 119: EXT. LANDSCAPE. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAWN. A little house in winter meadows. Kind of pretty now it's pain- ted. Just the first tint of pink on its roof. The Carol dissol- ves into birdsong. Here comes the sun for a fine Christmas day. 120: EXT. VERANDA. HOUSE. DAWN. All new paint and all new things in expectation of happy times. A barbecue still in polythene wraps. Price tag and unconnected gas pipe shift gently in the breeze. A brand now swinging seat. BERLIN sits in it with shock wearing on. Expressionless of sor- row. Though he suffers every sorrow and guilt and regret there is. Sunlight reaches the veranda and colors the end of it red. silent and motionless he watches the lousiest dawn of his life. 121: EXT/INT. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. LIVING ROOM. DAY. Lights glow on the Christmas tree. Unopened presents still und- erneath. SERATO sits smoking in silence. Listens to a sound of plates getting stacked in another room. He looks up but not in surprise. He just wasn't aware BERLIN had arrived in the house. BERLIN Where's Margie? Stunned and stubbled and full of grief. And that's just SERATO. SERATO Taken Bobby to her sister's .. This atmosphere is unbearable and even these whispers seem laud. They were going there anyway. BERLIN Does he know? SERATO shakes his head. Loses his cigarette. And SAMMY appears. SERATO Thinks his dad's in hospital. SAMMY SERATO is 30 and pretty. She continues collecting plates. Why'd you go up there, John? Knows he's not going to get a reply and doesn't bother to wait for it. HELENA materializes from the den like a shadow. Sallow for want of sleep and glad to have BERLIN's hand to hang on to. BERLIN I want you to go to your Aunt's. A suggestion that surprises HELENA. And clearly doesn't appeal. HELENA Why can't I stay with you? BERLIN It's not possible right now. HELENA Why? BERLIN Please don't ask no quest- ions now .. Not right now .. If silence can intensify it's now. Sound of the front door and then footsteps. BERLIN freezes as MARGIE appears. Wracked with grief. Dead sickness of tears. Like she cried bones out of her face. But no weeping now. Maybe shock. Maybe brave. Maybe both. HELENA Is that Margie? MARGIE I'm here, honey. I'm right here. The strongest face in the house. And now HELENA is in her arms. Don't cry darlin .. he was a big old cop and he didn't like tears .. Dead echos of plates in the kitchen. And song of birds outside. Feels like every second in my life, was just the moment leading to this. BERLIN Margie .. MARGIE Don't. Raises her hand to silence him and this is silence Margie owns. Don't. Christ this is just awful. HELENA crying and BERLIN on the way. What's gonna happen now, John? BERLIN She has an aunt, in Vermont. I'll take her there tonight. HELENA I'm going back to the institute. BERLIN No .. not now .. MARGIE Helena can stay here if she'd like to .. I'd like her to .. I'll look after her .. and she can look after me .. I'm tired now .. I must sleep .. Footsteps again as she walks out and silence again like before. 122: INT. BEDROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. NIGHT. The Camera will slowly crane down on BERLIN. Fully dressed but wiped out he lays an the bad. Last thing he needs is booze. He is clearly full of it. Drifting in and out of consciousness. A nightmare either side of the line. He relives that night again. And Ross is alive again as guilt and regret demand to be heard. (ROSS) You want me to make a predict- ion? This guy ain't turning up. (BERLIN) Maybe not .. What time is it? (ROSS) Twenty-six minutes past two .. (BERLIN) You shouldn't have come, Ross. (ROSS) Don't worry .. You take your time .. I just wanna be back in time for Bobby's presents .. A memory that is too terrible to bear. BERLIN gets up and sits at the edge of the bad. Head in hands. Wants the pain to go aw- ay. But anguish is stronger than alcohol. Hears noises outside and makes it to a window. Tears curtains back revealing lights. His Mercedes hangs in space as though staring into the bedroom. 123: EXT. FRONT YARD. HOUSE. NIGHT. The Mercedes descends onto a low-loader courtesy of a car lift- ing truck. BERLIN out of his door. Almost too ruined to apprec- iate what's happening. Crane lights and flashlights and chains getting tightened. Couple of Strangers and a Kid he recognizes. BERLIN What are you doing, Travis? TRAVIS I been told to take your car in, Sir. BERLIN Why? TRAVIS I dunno, Sir. Brought you up a Chevy. Flashes his light at a standard issue (brown) police Chevrolet. I'm sorry, Sergeant. I did knock a couple times. Didn't get any reply. BERLIN You got a warrant for this? TRAVIS Yes, Sir. BERLIN Who sought the warrant? TRAVIS The man from the F.B.I. 124: INT. CHIEF'S OFFICE. POLICE STATION. DAY. The man from the F.B.I. is 50. Black suit and wing tips. All F. B.I. Investigators are either lawyers or accountants. And this fellow looks like both. When he smiles it's a decaffeinated ex- ercise. Bothers nothing but lips. This smile's always the same. BERLIN I want a 24 hour protection of Margie's house. Otherwise I'm not saying nothing. You give me that, or read me my rights, and talk to a lawyer. BERLIN looks awful. Showered and shaved but just fucking awful. CITRINE slips focus to the man. And St ANNE imperceptibly nods. CITRINE Alright, you got it. And I'll be putting an Observer in with you. BERLIN I want Serato .. (Negative) Why can't I have Serato? CITRINE Coz I'm short of men & Ang- elo won't do it .. Who ever I got free first - you get .. 125: INT. ANTI ROOM/INTERROGATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. Close on a pair of dancing needles. They react to voice-levels on a twin spool tape recorder. But no sound of yakking in here. St Anne's ASSISTANT sucks a pencil. Busy with a cross-word puz- zle. Fills in a word but the Camera isn't interested. It moves away to discover head phones. And moves closer to hear St ANNE. [Always figured I'd like to retire to a little town like this - maybe buy a boat even, do some fishing?] 126: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. A change of chairs. A wood chair for the subject. Mobile chair for the man. Castors give him considerable freedom. Enable him to back off or move in with the intimacy of an ophthalmologist. St ANNE You fish, John? BERLIN I have done .. A side table features several pin sharp pencils. A Sony pocket recorder. Two packets of Pall Mall reds. Two yellow legal pads. The chair moves into reverse and he breaks a puke colored file. St ANNE Alright, let's not beat about the bush, what ever that may mean, and get down on it. You were specific- ally instructed by your chief, not to go anywhere near the blind inst- itute? So why did you go up there? BERLIN Because of a feeling. I had a bad feeling this man was gonna turn up. St ANNE Which man is that? BERLIN The man I detail in my report, Sir. The report that's in his hands. (St Anne knows well which man.) Is this an interview, or an interrogation? St ANNE It's an enquiry ... BERLIN I'm not prepared to be interrog- ated. I'll be interviewed as an officer, who may be expected to cooperate with the investigator. St ANNE Well, that's fine by me, John. And I'm sure that's fine by your Chief. He smiles the non-smile. Tosses his pencil down. And sits back. So you thought your man might show? BERLIN Yes. St ANNE Bit of a long-shot, wasn't it? BERLIN It was the only shot I had .. St ANNE So the one night you decide to go up there, he goes up there? BERLIN That's right. Except I'd decid- ed to go up there every night .. St ANNE Despite the wishes of your Chief? BERLIN Yes. St ANNE You were prepared to fal- sify your reports to him? BERLIN I had very good reasons for do.... St ANNE Just a second, John. I knew there was something missing. St ANNE cuts him off to pick up the phone. Obviously something vital is needed. "Could you bring an an ashtray in here? Got a coupla guys who smoke in here." And attention back to the file. You don't mind if I jump around a little this morning, do you? Just while I'm easing my way into this? BERLIN You're asking the questions, Sir .. St ANNE You had an argument with Ross? Ass- aulted one of the officers, right? BERLIN I wouldn't use the word "assault." St ANNE You got a "racy temper," Sergeant? BERLIN Not especially. St ANNE Just something they did, on this occasion, made you lose your rag? BERLIN Not they. He. Taylor put a piece in the newspaper, which in my op- inion put my witness in jeopardy. St ANNE From whom? BERLIN From the man I detail in my rep- ort. A crazy man, who to my cert- ain knowledge has killed at least eight girls. Six in San Diego, one someplace else, and one up here .. St ANNE Not a lotta support for that "scenario" though, is there? BERLIN Not a lot. St ANNE Not even from Ross? BERLIN No. St ANNE Is that why you lost your temper with him? Frustration? No one believing you? His ASSISTANT brings the ashtray. And St ANNE smiles gratitude. So what can you tell me about you man? BERLIN What do you mean, Sir? St ANNE I mean, who is he? BERLIN I don't know who he is. Who's "Jack The Ripper?" He's Jack The Ripper with an automobile. St ANNE You didn't run a profile? BERLIN No, Sir .. I didn't have the res- ources, and it isn't my expertise. St ANNE This crazy man? What makes you think he wants to eliminate Miss Robertson? BERLIN You read my report, Sir. St ANNE I'm asking a question .. BERLIN Because he reads I'm investigating the disappearance of her friend, & Miss Robertson becomes the focus of his anxiety. How good of a "witness" is she? He's crazy, but not stupid, he's intelligent. Got a flexible M. O., and he doesn't wanna get caught. St ANNE Just like "Jack The Ripper?" This is meant to humiliate and meant to annoy and it does both. Alright, we'll have plenty of time to discuss your "Mystery Man," and his "flexibility" later, Right now, I'd like to talk about the "event." 127: INT. ANTI ROOM/INTERROGATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. CITRINE rests on his cane staring through the one-way glass. A menu of anxieties. But perhaps sadness is his principal expres- sion. His eyes slide to the ASSISTANT "Can you turn that thing on?" Glad to oblige and Voices cut in. This is CITRINE'S P.O.V. St ANNE [BERLIN] Alright, the door comes back and hits you? Knocks you down? Knocks you out? For how long? [I don't know] Approximately, you figure? A minute? [O.K.] O.K. then what happened? Immediately you get up? 128: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN I realized the flashlight was at the bottom of the stairs St ANNE Did you check your weapon? BERLIN Maybe. It would have been instinctive. All I know was I was in possession of it .. St ANNE You didn't check it? BERLIN Not that I specifically remember. St ANNE Why not? BERLIN I don't know. I wasn't think- ing about it .. I was dazed .. St ANNE You were woozy? Confused? BERLIN I was unconscious 10 seconds ago. St ANNE I understand. Then? BERLIN Then I picked up the flashlight, tried to get Ross on the radio .. Nothing. Static. I got blood on my hand, realized my eye was cut. St ANNE Could you see out of it? BERLIN Yeah, I could see. Then I ran. Climbed out of the window, ran down the fire escape, and right at the bottom, I found Ross .. St ANNE Were you breathless? BERLIN Sure I was breathless ... St ANNE When did you realize you were no longer in possession of the .25? BERLIN Not until I was in the hospital. St ANNE You figure you lost it in the hospital? Or on the way there? BERLIN No, I thought it must have fallen down the stairwell. St ANNE [BERLIN] Like the flashlight? [Yeah] Had you been drinking that night? BERLIN It was Christmas Eve. St ANNE That wasn't my question? BERLIN Yes. St ANNE [BERLIN] How about Ross? [Sure] Were you drinking in the car? [?] There was a bottle in the car? BERLIN I think Ross had a mouthful? St ANNE But not you? BERLIN I may have had a nip? St ANNE To keep out the cold? .. Very cold that night, very windy, wasn't it? St ANNE motors off & refers to notes without looking at BERLIN. Which hand was the flashlight in? BERLIN My left hand. St ANNE And the Walther was in your right? BERLIN The Beretta was in my right hand .. St ANNE You said you didn't check it? So how d'you know which gun you're holding? The chair moves back in and its pilot has an icicle up his ass. You said you figured it had fallen down the stairs with the flashlight? You said you were confused? You pick up the flashlight in confusion, how d'you know you didn't pick up the 25? BERLIN Let's not start playing games, Mr St Anne. St ANNE Games? BERLIN I told you, I'd lost the Walther .. St ANNE You told me you didn't know you'd lost it until you were in the hos- pital? So, if you didn't know till then, it coulda been either weapon? BERLIN The gun in my hand was a Beretta. And for the record, I want that note corrected. Now, please, Sir. The dead smile and rubber in action. St ANNE changes his notes. St ANNE O.K. I'm corrected. I'm sorry, I made a mistake. BERLIN With respect, Sir, you didn't make a mistake. I know who you are, and you're far too experienced for mis- takes. Now if you have doubts over the content, or veracity of my rep- ort, I wanna be made aware of them? St ANNE Sure. BERLIN I wanna be made aware of them now. St ANNE Do you want a lawyer, Sergeant? BERLIN There you go again? "Do I want a lawyer, Sergeant?" It's a game question. What do I want a law- yer for? I got nothing to hide .. St ANNE You don't? BERLIN You know I don't. So let's quit the bullshit and get down to it. What's your "angle," Mr St Anne? For the first time St ANNE moves his chair into BERLIN's space. St ANNE Where's the little gun, Sergeant? BERLIN I've no idea. St ANNE You don't? BERLIN If it isn't in the institute, the man who shot Ross took it. St ANNE The man who shot Ross, used it .. Implications are ganging up quicker than BERLIN can focus them. And you don't know where that little twenty-five calibre Walther's gone? BERLIN confirms it. Looking very concerned. The wheels retreat. St ANNE shakes out a cigarette and takes his time with matches. O.K. Sergeant, here it is. I intend to produce evidence, that will prove you shot Frederick Ross with malice afore- thought. My angle therefore, is to pre- pare a case on behalf of your Chief, to prosecute you for first degree murder. 129: INT. ADMINISTRATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. The lights on the Christmas tree are off. That just about sums it up. The word's out and it talks in barren silence as BERLIN appears. TAYLOR and SERATO in conference at a desk. The former looks. The latter turns away. BERLIN walks the room into close- up. "Like some coffee, John?" Seems like ANN is the only benev- olent face around. She gets a lost smile & bewildered shake of his head. Disappears into his room And quietly closes the door. 130: INT. CRIME LAB. POLICE STATION. DAY. A picture of Ross fills the frame. Snapped the day they search- ed the dump. Blasted with rain. A waterproof cape and a finger raised in defiance. BERLIN shifts eyes from the bulletin board. Pours a last inch of whisky and drinks. Eyes back to the board for a last photographic/panoramic record of his time in Eureka. The photo of Ross again before his eyes sweep quickly on. Pict- ure of Amber Stone. Thumb tacks and maps and tape. Information relating to specific areas in San Diego. Carlsbad/Ocean Beach/ Point Loma. "Jennifer Seven" "Jennifer Eight." But who gives a fuck anymore? Two dead dogs on a refuse dump. And now the dead face of a Dummy. BERLIN stares till someone knocks on the door. St ANNE comes in smoking a cigarette and eating a ham sandwich. St ANNE You go home, John, get some sleep. I don't wanna talk any more today. BERLIN Aren't you gonna arrest me? St ANNE You know better than that ... He will exit when he stops speaking. Before he does he wanders the lab showing particular interest in the Dummy of Jennifer 8. I arrest you, you'll get bail, and be walking outta here anyway - and I'll have no one to talk to - Your Chief said he'd make you available to me. If you go to the store, call in, and let your duty officer know. 131: INT. BOBBY'S BEDROOM. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. NIGHT. BOBBY is in hysterics. A gale of tears. Fits his words between them. His Mom does her best to cope with his grief and her own. MARGIE Your Daddy would have wanted you to be strong .. We gotta be strong for Daddy, darling .. BOBBY I don't want her in this house .. I want my Dad. Why did she have to come here .. I want my Daddy .. 132: INT. KITCHEN. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. Fingers search out and identify phone numbers. Dial for inform- ation and HELENA whispers "I need the number for a cab, please." 133: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. The Camera's getting closer and so is St ANNE. And today there is a definite change of mood. Still very measured. Still a pro- fessional demeanor. But a bad sense of shit about to come down. St ANNE .. there was a gale that night .. all the doors are swinging .. so this door swings back and clips you .. and down you go .. within 35 seconds of uncon- sciousness, you're back on the fire es- cape, and you're confused, really con- fused .. you don't know if Tuesdays come in two's or happen once a week .. Bit of a cold coming on and near enough for BERLIN to catch it. You see a figure coming up the stairs. Ross ain't meant to be on the stairs? He challenges you .. and this ain't a piece of wood with a nail through it .. this guy's got a 12 gauge Winchester up your nose .. and he's drunk .. and you're dizzy .. and your eye's fulla blood .. you ain't thinking good, and you're seeing worse .. Wow! .. it just went off! .. You just put him down? .. and you get hit by a Glaser, you stay down .. But he ain't dead .. Now, you realize you shot your partner .. "Oh, Suzanna, how do I get outta this?" I know .. The "Serial Killer" shot him .. And here comes the malice, John .. 17 seconds later, you put another one in his throat .. Isn't that what happened? BERLIN No. St ANNE Tell us what happened, then? BERLIN I already told you what happened .. You're looking for an inconsisten- cy, and you're not gonna find one, because I'm telling you the truth. St ANNE Tell me the truth again. 134: EXT. TRACK/FRONT YARD. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. A yellow cab splashes through puddles and pulls up in front of the house. HELENA gets out and pays. No she doesn't need assis- tance. Picks up her suitcase and the cab vanishes into drizzle. 135: INT. KITCHEN/LIVING ROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. Back door opens and HELENA walks in. First thing she senses is cold. This place smells like it hasn't been lived in since she was last here. And last time she was here she was happy. Dumps her case and heads for the living room. Can't see it but feels the overwhelming gloom. Finds a couch and now she sits to wait. The silence is almost total. But something disturbs it. HELENA looks around. Back on her feet she tries to discover source of the sound. Finally arrives at a table lamp. She feels the bulb and it's hot. A large moth beats itself crazy inside the shade. Reaches in and turns it off & the house is in virtual darkness. 136: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. St ANNE lights a cigarette. Attention with his notes. Sniffing a fair bit. He's acquired a toilet roll to deal with it. Occas- ionally will tear a sheet or two off to blow his nose. Glances at BERLIN "You want a cigarette?" No he doesn't "I've given up." St ANNE You have? .. How about the booze? .. How does St ANNE know? Perhaps he doesn't? Sounds like he does. Too much booze can be very dangerous .. memory black outs .. stuff like that .. His attention still with notes like a quack about to prescribe. "The Man Takes a Drink, Then the Drink Takes a Drink, Then the Drink Takes the Man?" .. Something like that, isn't it? .. Anyway .. why did you give up? BERLIN I guess I was drinking too much. St ANNE I was talking about "cigarettes?" (Score: 10 outta 10) Find yourself getting breathless? BERLIN Sure. St ANNE Specially if you're running? Which floor did the elevator run up to? BERLIN Five. St ANNE You ran up to the fifth? You must have been real breathless by then? BERLIN doesn't know where this is going but he doesn't like it. Eyes to BERLIN now and his smile looks real for the first time. We're gonna get our "observer" in here this afternoon. Keep an eye on us? (He smiles) Notorious for withholding information, the F.B.I. St ANNE makes a note. Junks the pencil. Sits back in his chair. Were you aware there was a janit- or in the institute that night? BERLIN No. St ANNE You didn't check? BERLIN There wasn't time ... St ANNE That wasn't my question? BERLIN No, Sir, I didn't check. St ANNE breaks off to blow his nose. BERLIN looks very worried. St ANNE I'm really catching cold up here? Must be all this fog? BERLIN What's the relevance of the janitor? St ANNE The janitor? Let me just ask you a question - before I forget - do you take any medication for that? BERLIN For what? St ANNE Breathlessness? BERLIN No. St ANNE Alright, let me answer your question? "What's the relevance of the janitor?" Hits the cigarette like this is the one that caused the cancer. Why don't I take you through it, from where I'm sitting .. At some time bet- ween 2 & 2:30 a.m. the janitor thought he heard a vehicle approaching through the woods. He looks out, and sees noth- ing, no lights, nothing. Figures it must be hunters. Some time later, he thought he heard something else, like a door, or a window slam? He gets up, and between half past two and a quarter of three, he makes a search - with a flashlight - of the top 3 floors. Finds nothing untoward, & goes back to his apartment in the roof. BERLIN looks grey as sick. Knows what's coming. And here it is. The flashlight you saw, was his. The "footsteps" you heard, were his. The elevator you were chasing up and down after was empty, and is prone to such activity, due to an electrical fault .. Apparently it happens frequently dur- ing gales. The gale that was swinging the door. That knocked you down. That confused you so much? And here we are, back to where I'm sitting. You wanna tell me what really went on that night? It seems St ANNE has effectively destroyed the "Serial Killer" scenario. Stubs his cigarette and waits for BERLIN's response. BERLIN Two people know I didn't kill him, Mr St Anne. One's me, and the other's the man that did. St ANNE What man? St ANNE is winning. And they both know it. And he almost grins. We just dealt with "the man?" BERLIN How d'you know the Jan- itor didn't shoot him? If St ANNE can raise an eyebrow he does. By implication BERLIN is ditching his "Killer." During this St ANNE rewinds his Sony. You're telling me it's his flashlight I saw, O.K., he sees my flashlight? And I'm coming up the stairs with a Beretta in my hand. And he's frightened. He hits the door on me. Picks up my gun. He's running. He runs into Ross, and in panic, he shoots him. The little Sony snaps to a stop and St ANNE looks at his watch. St ANNE Not unless he had a gun in one hand, and a phone in the other, he didn't. Ross was shot at ex- actly two fifty-seven a.m. The janitor put a call through to the local police, at 2:57 a.m. You obviously realize how I can get so accurate with my timing? St ANNE backs off and carefully replaces the Sony on the table. Ross switched into channel 8, & we got a recording of the whole incident. I was gonna play it to you, but I got a meeting, we'll have to do it after lunch. It's one, let's make it back by three? 137: INT. BEDROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DAY. HELENA is curled up under blankets. Maybe day-dreaming but not asleep. She's maybe here to keep warm as much as anything else. Sound of a vehicle approaching and she sits to listen. The car pulls up and its engine silences. HELENA is already out of bed. 138: INT. LIVING ROOM/PORCH/FRONT YARD. HOUSE. DAY. Silhouette of a figure outside the front door. Someone rattles the handle but it's locked. And by the time HELENA reaches the door the visitor has gone. Thinking it's Berlin she twists the key and steps onto the porch. A stale winter fog settling down. Hardly a sound except her own voice. "John? Is that you?" Just the rattle of local Crows and a Bull heaving somewhere in some distant field. "John?" She cautiously descends wood stairs and walks two or three paces before bumping into a brown Chevrolet. Exploration of the car establishes nil. More confused than con- cerned she listens. Country sound and not a sound out of place Then suddenly she is alert. Something clatters somewhere. Like cans kicked in the garage? Was it the garage? "John, is it you?" 139: INT. KITCHEN/LIVING ROOM/BEDROOM. HOUSE. DAY. HELENA locks the front door. Moves into the kitchen. Locks the back door. Glum silence in the house. Nothing but an old alarm clock ticking. Then a sound like something moving. Like a door creaking open? Was it in the garage? The living room? Upstairs? She returns to the living room. Curtains drawn and almost dark. The endless silence is interrupted by a rush of water in pipes. If anybody's here they're upstairs? HELENA moves to the bottom of them "John, are you up there? It's me, darling. I got a cab." The only reply is more silence. She begins to climb the stairs. One hand on the wall. She ascends slowly. Her helplessness giv- ing way to suspicion with each new step. At the top she pushes into the bedroom "John, are you here? Darling? Are you alright?" Apparently no one is here. Certainly no one in the bed. And no one in the bathroom. She reappears with an expression suppress- ing anxiety. Feels her way past an antique wardrobe. Curiously its door is open. A full length mirror inside. Shuts it as she passes and for a split-instant the Man in the room is revealed. Almost simultaneously fingers in black leather clasp her wrist. HELENA in speechless with shock. Both she and the INTRUDER are breathing hard. The only other sound is the wardrobe door whin- ing open again under its weight. Manifests a reflection of his back. Totally in black. Black wool hat. Leather jacket. Gloves. INTRUDER Got really fucken lucky, didn't ya? He backs her to the bed and sits her before releasing his grip. The frame remains static and staring into the mirror and still on the INTRUDER's back. HELENA stares unseeing at her own face. I was getting kinda concerned about you Jenny. Like, how blind are you? Blind as your friend? Or less blind? Coz she could see, you know. Had a view outta one of em. But you don't see nothing do you? Nothing at all? He reaches into his jeans and produces a stainless steel knife. Even closed this thing is 10 inches long. A leather loop attat- ched at one and. He teases the metal in front of HELENA's eyes. Can you see this, blind girl? Not a switch-blade but by snapping it like a whip it locks out. Gimme your hand. Too terrified to obey and her inability momentarily angers him. Gimme your fucken hand. HELENA lifts her hand and he takes it. He runs the edge of the blade over her palm. Then closes her fingers around the handle. You like it? She is paralyzed except for the tears spilling down her cheeks. I cut your friend's head off with that .. Words come out she can barely hear herself. "You are a coward." You say something, Jenny? In this terrible silence she hears a double hiss of an aerosol. I'd like to cut you. I'd like to cut you so bad .. But ain't life strange? You're my little buddy now .. I guess we all got lucky? 140: EXT. CAR PARK. POLICE STATION. CITY OF EUREKA. DAY. Fog and dusk in that order. Headlights descend the slope. Park and CITRINE plus cane get out. As he crosses the lot a Uniform fires up a Harley. Next face is SERATO heading for his car. He accosts the Chief with a piece of paper. It is read with escal- ating incredulity. This would be comic if it wasn't so serious. SERATO She's in love with him, Chief, and try anything? CITRINE Are you going up there? SERATO No, I just sent Travis. I've got a call to make. CITRINE What about the man? .. Has he seen this? .. [No he hasn't] .. Alright, make your call, and get up there ... Bullshit or not, I wanna proper statement .. 141: INT. ANTI ROOM/INTERROGATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. CITRINE walks in in his overcoat. BISLEY looks across from the window. And the ASSISTANT up from a crossword. "Are they busy?" ASSISTANT No, Sir, they just got back. CITRINE Would you ask Mr St Anne to come in here a moment? The ASSISTANT does it via phone. And BISLEY looks over unhappy. BISLEY I hear I've been nominated as an official "observer?" CITRINE It's either you, or Taylor? BISLEY He don't wanna do it either. CITRINE I'll toss a coin for you. But one of you is going in today .. St ANNE comes in blowing his nose. CITRINE shoves him the mess~ age. He reads it with similar incredulity (but perhaps a touch more amusement than Citrine) "What d'you wanna do with it, Sir?" What do you wanna do with it? St ANNE Let him have it .. I don't mind putting a little salt at the edge of his plate .. 142: EXT. FRONT YARD. BERLIN'S HOUSE. DUSK. A single light in a downstairs room. The house is stifled with fog. A brown police Chevy parked out front. Here comes another to join it. As BERLIN gets out SERATO appears on the porch. He descends stairs with the impartial expression of a working cop. BERLIN I need a friend, Angelo. SERATO keeps it dispassionate. Ignores BERLIN's desperate eyes. SERATO You got one. Puts a thumb towards the house and already heading for his oar. She's a bad witness, John. But a fucking lousy alibi. 143: INT. LIVING ROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. This isn't a good place to be. A dismal lamp supplies light. A close-up Of HELENA on the sofa. Hears a sound of booze getting poured. But nothing else in the house except for a harsh voice. BERLIN (O.S.) .. I know why you did it darlin, but you're not helping me. Every- thing they're hearing they think is a lie. Now here comes the man I'm desperate to prove exists, & whadda-ya-know, he turns up at my house, and has a "chat" with you? By now BERLIN and his glass of anaesthetic are well into frame. No one in the State of California is gonna believe that. They got the man in there - an A/1 F.B.I. inter- rogator, and he's taking me to pie- ces - doesn't believe a word comes outta my head - not a word - no one believes me - I don't believe me .. HELENA Don't say that. Don't you dare say that .. I believe you .. BERLIN I know you're trying to help me, but you don't understand. HELENA Then explain it to me. I got enough darkness, don't I? He doesn't want to. But now he's got to. And so here it comes. BERLIN The man who killed Amber is a psychopath. He was up at the in- stitute to kill you - he don't wanna kill Rose - he was there to kill you - that's the truth - and I didn't wanna tell it to you - but that's the reason I want you to stay at Margie's - coz I can't protect you here .. HELENA Why does he want to kill me? BERLIN Coz he thinks you're a witness. HELENA I can't identify him .. BERLIN He don't know that. I didn't. HELENA Then why didn't he kill me? Back at the booze and he's almost inaudible "Stop it, will you?" Why didn't he kill me, John? Something snaps in BERLIN and he throws his glass at the grate. BERLIN Will you fucken stop it. I'm not Serato .. He didn't kill you coz he wasn't here .. he isn't in the room with you, and lets you live .. And just as suddenly he's full of remorse. Takes HELENA in his arms with a lot of sorrys. But she isn't interested in apology. There's a passion in her face. And fire even in her blind eyes. HELENA Kiss me, John .. Kiss me [he does] I love you, kiss me again [he does] I love you .. Are my lips lying to you? Kiss my mouth [he does] Is my mouth lying to you? He. Was. Here. 144: INT. GARAGE. HOUSE. NIGHT. Music slams in on the cut. Berlin is about to take this garage to pieces. He searches cans and boxes and stacked timber. What ever it is his eyes are looking. The Camera looks down from ab- ove. Bits & pieces all over the floor but he discovers nothing. 145: INT. BATHROOM/BEDROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. Close on a hand searching underside of the bath. Pipes and cob- webs. He reaches toward the taps. His hand is literally inches from the Walther (taped to the end of the tub). Fingers almost touch it. Just a fingernail away when HELENA interrupts "John?" HELENA (O.S.) I just remembered something .. And BERLIN rolls out and stares up like a mechanic under a car. He used a breath freshener. BERLIN A "breath freshener?" HELENA stands in the doorway and BERLIN is already on his feet. HELENA I heard it hiss, twice. BERLIN wipes a thought through his hair with fingers. "I don't know what that means." Walks past into the bedroom. Everything taken apart. Every drawer open and the bed heaped with clothes. BERLIN ... he's either here to take something .. or leave some- thing .. I don't find nothing .. 146: INT. LIVING ROOM. HOUSE. NIGHT. BERLIN pours last of the whisky. Looks totally snuffed out. He and HELENA sit on the same sofa but the atmosphere puts them a mile apart. A yellow pad on the table covered in notes. BERLIN swallows scotch and reads to himself "I guess we all got lucky?" HELENA You gotta stop drinking, darling. Another mouthful of scotch & she hears the glass hit the table. He's glad you're drinking. Every drink you take you're helping him. BERLIN He doesn't need my help. HELENA I know about alcohol, John. BERLIN You do? HELENA I'm blind because my father drank. That's what she knows about alcohol and he'd prefer to be dead. I lost everyone I ever loved .. I lost my hopes .. my future .. I'm in love with you, John .. I don't want them to take you away from me .. 147: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. St ANNE is close enough to kiss BERLIN. Right into his space & talking right into his face. And today he's not in a good mood. St ANNE He humiliated you. In front of every one .. In front of a bunch of secret- aries? .. Well, that would piss any- one off? ... That would piss me off .. I'd be real mad if a guy did that to me, & called himself a friend .. Coz that ain't a friendly thing to do? .. You side with "friends" .. You don't go bitchin on them behind their back? And he suddenly switches gear. And whispers like it's a secret. He wasn't much of a "friend" at all? BERLIN Ross was my best friend. St ANNE Did you shoot your "best friend?" BERLIN No. St ANNE The next time I ask you that quest- ion, you're gonna tell me the truth. St ANNE shunts back in his chair. Expands the frame as he goes. Sergeant TAYLOR sits on a chair with his back to the wall. Cig- arettes and ashtray on the table next to his. St ANNE lights a Pall Mall and as if it's an after-thought he snaps the Sony on. [TAPE] .. "Just be careful now, coz I'm coming up." .. [Footsteps on cast iron stairs] "Is that you, John? .. Answer .. Now .. or I blow this fucken staircase to pie- ces." [Sound of someone breathing hard] BERLIN already looks devastated. He's about to got annihilated. "Me, Freddy." .. [Just the gale] "What the hell's going on up there, Brother? I been calling ton minutes." .. [Lungs heave for air) "Hey, c'mon, John, talk to me?" [Just the sound of breathless- ness] "Jesus Christ .. What are you do- ing? What the fuck are you doing? It's me - Holy shit - John - John - Not you - Don't shoot you crazy bastard! [2 shots] St ANNE clicks the Sony off & BERLIN is too stunned to breathe. St ANNE That's second degree - you wanna stop at that? Will you give me that, John? BERLIN gives him nothing but silence. A knock on the door "Come in." And the ASSISTANT hands St ANNE a note. Reads it and excus- es himself. Leaves the silence for BERLIN. But TAYLOR breaks it. TAYLOR He's offerin you a deal? Why don't you take it .. BERLIN He ain't offerin me shit. TAYLOR lights a cigarette and exhales. Something of a real red- headed fuck about him. And BERLIN would like to break his neck. You're letting it show, King Jay. TAYLOR I don't like you. But don't kid yourself .. I don't take no ple- asure sitting in on another cop .. He rolls ash off his cigarette and pushes it round the ashtray. Your an alcoholic, aren't you? (BERLIN stares) It's written in your file .. The phone rings and TAYLOR answers. Puts his red eyes at BERLIN. They want you to look in the mirror. BERLIN has to find every strength for this one. Humiliation com- pounds. Gets up and stares at his own haunted face in the glass. 148: INT. ANTI ROOM/INTERROGATION. POLICE STATION. DAY. The MYOPIC peers into BERLIN's face. St ANNE stands close with his toilet roll. Light refracts in the MYOPIC's lenses "I seen him up there quite a lot." St ANNE blows his nose "Is that the man you saw that night?" He stares again at the tormented face. MYOPIC Well .. I dunno .. it could be? St ANNE Alright, thank you, Mr Dawson .. He's escorted to the door and his space is occupied by CITRINE. CITRINE What's all this "deal" business? St ANNE on his way to the door now. He pauses for the question. St ANNE I can have him out of here on a sec- ond degree this afternoon. I own him, and he knows it. And, Chief, I'm still waiting for that warrant on his house? 149: INT. WAITING AREA. POLICE STATION. DAY. HELENA waits on a bench in the empty room. Maybe a few scruffy magazines? But nothing of use to her in here except she's near Berlin. He arrives like every hope got abandoned and sits next to her. They clasp one another's hands before she embraces him. BERLIN You don't wanna sit here any more, sweetheart .. HELENA I wanna be near you ... Something difficult to tell her and doesn't know how to say it. BERLIN I think they're gonna arrest me. HELENA I don't want them to arrest you. BERLIN It's not as bad as it sounds .. They can't refuse me bail. Raise bail of my own cognizance & find the best damned lawyer there is .. Her tears are close to his face. No one but him could hear her. HELENA Oh, John, I'd do anything, anything, to get you free. 150: INT. INTERROGATION ROOM. POLICE STATION. DAY. If the waiting room felt bad try sitting in here. Both St ANNE and TAYLOR are smoking and the Sony playing again. This is the final part of the tape. No speech but a lot of labored breath- ing. Ross groaning and now the sound of his shotgun. More desp- erate inhalations and now sound of the last shot into his neck. St ANNE .. and that one's with malice .. that one's first degree .. why don't you stop lying to me? (Clicks Sony off) C'mon, John, I can help you? Why don't you tell me the truth? BERLIN I've told you the truth. It isn't me .. I've never call- ed Ross "Freddy" in my life .. TAYLOR I've heard you call him Freddy. BERLIN You haven't. And you got no voice in here, Taylor, so keep it shut. St ANNE Tell a lotta lies, don't you? Some- thing that comes naturally to you? BERLIN I don't lie. St ANNE Prepared to lie to your Chief? BERLIN Under exceptional circumstances. St ANNE What were the circumstances that caused you to lie to Freddy Ross? BERLIN I never lied to Ross .. St ANNE You didn't? Shakes his head in confirmation. And St ANNE finds a notebook. Well, he thought you did? .. Wrote it down in his book? "John Berlin is a liar." Right here, underlined. BERLIN stares at the book & can barely credit what he's seeing. Dated the day you got your first "break" with your "Mystery Man?" You don't know why he wrote that? (He doesn't) Maybe he thought there was no "Myst- ery Man?" That the investigation was bullshit? That you were making it up? And during the next attack St ANNE will work himself into rage. Coz you wanted to be "Top Cop?" Isn't that why you went running up that gar- bage dump, so everyone could stand in awe of the "Top Cop?" Isn't that why you came up here? Coz you couldn't make it in L.A.? Get yourself a pissy lit- tle degree, come up here, and be "Top Guy?" But Ross was "Top Guy", wasn't he? Always would be Top Guy? And you know what? He did it without even trying .. Everybody loved him. He had everything you wanted, didn't he? - Great woman - Great kid? - Everything you couldn't have? - And you wanted it to go away? Coz your life was lousy, wasn't it? - A lousy life, with a lousy wife, who was fucking everyone, wasn't she? Is that why you pick on a little Blind Girl? - coz you can control her? - Is that it? - Control who she's fucking? Tears of grief and tears of rage. BERLIN can't restrain either. You wanna lose your temper with me? C'mon, John, lose your fucken temper? You're good at losing your temper?.. BERLIN No way, Mr St Anne. St ANNE Lost your temper with Ross, didn't you? C'mon, tell me the truth. Is that what happened? You had an arg- ument in the car? Lost your temper with him? Stood over him, blew his fucking larynx out with a Glaser? - Where were you aiming, John? Going for his face? Blow his fucking face away, because you hated him so much. BERLIN is a wreck of despair. But somehow he keeps his dignity. BERLIN I loved that guy .. & the hard- est thing to take in here .. is knowing he thought I killed him .. St ANNE Well, that he did .. And that do I, Sergeant Berlin .. And at last he looks pleased. Because he's got this man busted. What do you take for that breathlessness, Sergeant? Can't take anymore questions. Answers with a shake of his head. How about Aminophylline? BERLIN I don't know what that is. St ANNE You don't? It's ant anti-asthma medic- ation, prescribed for breathlessness? Produces a capsule in a plastic bag and throws it on the table. Came out of the ashtray of your car? Every cell in BERLIN's body freezes. Misinterpreted by St ANNE. But you "don't know" what it is? But he does know what it is. The pill he found in the V.W. van. You don't know how it got there? TAYLOR stares a rock drill and St ANNE stares something similar. You don't use it for breathlessness? BERLIN focuses a fragment of hope. But no sign of hope in here. I'm running outta questions, John, and you're running out of lies? I'm offer- ing you one last chance, and you better take it, or the U.S. Attorney is gonna put you in the God-damned gas chamber .. BERLIN I need .. some time .. to think Sir .. St ANNE Alright. Think about it. But don't you make a fool of me. You come in here with one more lie, and I bull- shit you not, I'm gonna press for the maximum penalty there is. And that's the death penalty, Sergeant. 151: INT. WAITING AREA. POLICE STATION. DAY. BERLIN hurries in and grabs HELENA's hand. Instantly transmits the adrenalin. They head for the door with him whispering hard. BERLIN We got a break - isn't much, but it's a break .. the man that murdered Ross gets asthma - it's not a breath fresh- ner, darling - it's an asthma inhaler .. 152: INT. KITCHEN. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. BERLIN/HELENA couldn't have been in the house longer than it's taken to call Los Angeles. MARGIE infected with the excitement although as yet she hardly knows what's going on. BERLIN paces the tiles on a long phone lead. Eyes to MARGIE while they wait. BERLIN This capsule came out of a V.W. van - I didn't even think about it - stuck it in the ashtray - if I'd been smok- ing, ita been thrown away weeks ago .. (Phone) No, Amanda - it's definitely Amanda .. Another excruciating wait plus further explanations for MARGIE. I had the van - this guy drove that van takes his medication and loses one .. (Phone) - Dan - Hearing - Are you sure? - Would you try Frisco for me? - I'll try and get a second name .. Dumps the phone and stokes anxiety in HELENA and MARGIE's eyes. No Amanda with a white Volkswagen .. You don't have a Yellow Pages for Oakland, do you? (She don't) I got- ta get down there, find that store .. Everything happens in a hurry. He embraces HELENA. She'll pray for him. Already out the back door with MARGIE in tow. A black & white parked in the drive with VENABLES stuffed inside. Plus a grim wind tearing trees. BERLIN pauses as he reaches his car. BERLIN You be careful .. This man's close .. Catches her eyes. Can barely look at them. They're full of hate. MARGIE If you find him, John. I want you to call me. I wanna know his name. 153: EXT. HILLSIDE. OAKLAND. DAY. Wide over the bay area. Wind swept and rain swept. City lights beginning to come on. In the distance the docks and far beyond the ocean. Somewhere here is a solitary phone booth. "I'm look- ing for a special type of rattan .. friend of mine recommended you, said I should ask for someone called Amanda .. You don't? O.K. .. Thank you." Followed by sound of a phone slamming down. 154: INT. PHONE BOOTH. HILLSIDE STREET. DAY. A stack of coins and a pair of ripped out Yellow Pages. BERLIN crosses off another number. Running out of craft shops and run- ning out of quarters. A new number hears the same old bullshit. But this one is answering good! Fights to keep his voice light. BERLIN (Phone) She's not there? - Let me just make sure I got the right Amanda - lotta freckles, right? .. Right .. That's right, that's her .. Well, eh, what time d'you expect her? .. O.K. I'll eh, try and pop over this afternoon. And he comes out of there running. The Chevy roars up the hill. 155: INT. ANTIQUE MARKET. CRAFT EMPORIUM. DUSK. The kind of store heads open in abandoned warehouses. A jungle of jewelry and cane furniture and ethnic junk. Many chairs of the ilk Berlin saw in the Volkswagen van. And now he's staring at its driver. His P.O.V. through windows. He watches as a red headed Girl clears the till in preparation to close up. within moments the lights are dead and AMANDA is heading for her door. 156: EXT. MARKET/WAREHOUSE. CAR PARK. DUSK. Plenty of rain to hurry in. AMANDA. drives a red Datsun. She ex- its the car park with a man in a brown Chevrolet following her. 157: EXT/INT. CAR/STREETS. SUBURBS. OAKLAND. NIGHT. The Chevy tails the Datsun through city streets. A lot of rush hour traffic. Music to go with it and it's probably Mussorgsky. A final cut and headlights are navigating the hills. Disappear and reappear as they ascend. Steep inclines and the houses are middle class. Too dark to see much now but lamp posts and rain. Still climbing the Datsun takes a side street. BERLIN keeps 50 yards behind. She turns off and parks in a sloping driveway. A white Volkswagen van at the top of it. BERLIN has already pull- ed over. Kills his lights and watches her hurry into the house. 158: EXT. STEEP STAIRS. PORCH. HOUSE. NIGHT. BERLIN just rang the doorbell. Imposes an impartial expression. But this is his last chance and he knows it. The front door is opened & secured on a safety-chain. AMANDA carries a white Cat. BERLIN I'm sorry to trouble you, but eh .. Wait a minute, don't I know you? And she stares like he does not. Before she stares like he does. You're Amanda? Remember, you near- ly ran into me? Way up in Trinity? His smile disarms the securities. And she opens the front door. AMANDA As I said, Sergeant, you nearly ran into me? What's the problem? BERLIN I'm afraid it's the "van" again. AMANDA The van? BERLIN Is it your vehicle? AMANDA No, my mother's .. You better stop in .. I'm just here to feed the cat. 159: INT. HALLWAY. HOUSE. NIGHT. So far so good. Inside without showing an I.D. he doesn't have. This is a gloomy place. She shuts the door. Shuts out the gale. BERLIN I'm sorry to worry you with this, but we had a real serious robbery, and we- 're chasing a white V.W. van? You guy came up an the computer, so as a matt- er of routine we have to check. Could you tell me who's driven it recently? AMANDA Only me and Mom .. BERLIN How about any guys on your staff? AMANDA We only got one .. He doesn't drive. BERLIN [AMANDA] Would he have lent it to anyone? [No] How bout your Dad? Husband? Boyfriend? AMANDA He is my boyfriend. My fath- er's dead, and I'm divorced. BERLIN I see ... His hopes are collapsing by the moment and nothing else is left. Would you mind if I took a look at it? AMANDA I thought this was "routine?" The Cat cries for its food and AMANDA begins to look suspicious. The only man that has driven it in the last 6 months is my uncle. And no way is he involved in a robbery. BERLIN Could I have his name? Just so I can officially eliminate him? Maybe too much charge in his head and she doesn't like the vibe? AMANDA Could I see your badge again? Sure she can and he searches for it. "Must have left it at home?" Then you better go and get it. I feel uncomfortable without an I.D. AMANDA opens the front door just long enough for BERLIN to leave. 160: INT. LIVING ROOM/KITCHEN. HOUSE. NIGHT. The emerging Music is full of threat. Like it's part of the dark- ness. Too dark to see much of anything here. A sound of somebody hammering at a door. A light outside and the Camera moves closer. Creeps towards the door as though it's going to answer. Suddenly glass shatters. The door flies open. Flashlights and Men rush in. 161. INT. CHEVROLET SEDAN. STREET. NIGHT. BERLIN stares towards the house. Music and rain and a downstairs light just wont out. Headlights go on and the Datsun drives away. 162: INT. CHIMNEY FLUE/BEDROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. NIGHT. A flashlight searches cobwebs and soot. Descends the chimney and TAYLOR emerges from a long-sealed-off fireplace. Blinks dirt out of his eyes and moves back into the bedroom. Upended bed against the wall and everything upsidedown. The search looks like it has been thorough. St ANNE appears at the door and TAYLOR looks over. TAYLOR We're not gonna find nothin here. 163: INT. MASTER BEDROOM. (AMANDA'S) HOUSE. NIGHT. BERLIN searches the bedroom. Anxiety and antiques. Does a vanity and now a wardrobe. Nothing much in either. But finds a shoe box full of letters in the latter. Postcards/birthday cards etcetera. 164: INT. BATHROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. NIGHT. Half the floorboards already up. VENABLES levers at another. The music is nervous and louder. Next floorboard is next to the bath. 165: INT. BEDROOM/WARDROBE. (AMANDA'S) HOUSE. NIGHT. Big close on a postcard (a fantasy yacht on a blue sea). The cap- tion reads "JUST ANOTHER DAY IN SAN DIEGO." Close enough to read the message ".. too hot .. asthma not too good .. as soon as I'm settled I'll write .. love John .." Next letter out is also post- marked San Diego. Inside is a happy snap of Sergeant John Taylor. 166: INT. BATHROOM. BERLIN'S HOUSE. NIGHT. Almost too close to see what's happening. But a gloved hand just found a pistol under the bath. Out it comes with BISLEY shouting. And St ANNE and TAYLOR arrive. "Got a little Walther. It's a 25." 167: INT. LIVING ROOM. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. HELENA looks at the floor and listens. MARGIE looks at the T.V. and listens. Big close on the screen. This scene will intercut between the television and those in front of it as appropriate. [1] An exterior shot of Berlin's house. Sheriff's cars parked out front. Various people come and go. One of them is Sergeant Taylor. Perpetual wind on the sound track interrupted by a V.O. MALE REPORTER Detectives spent several hours this morning at Sergeant Berlin's home .. various property was removed for ex- amination. Later in the morning, May- or Heineman arrived for a meeting with police officers from Shasta Valley .. [2] Heineman's B.M.W. pulls up outside the police station and this is conducted on the move. A Reporter asks "What's the nat- ure of this meeting, Sir?" HEINEMAN is sorry but can't comment. He pauses briefly an the steps with the wind savaging his hair. HEINEMAN (T.V.) Jim unable to say anything right now, except, this is a very sad and tragic day. John Berlin lied to us all. Lied to me, and much worse, lied to every man, woman, & child in this community .. WOMAN REPORTER (T.V.) Where was Mr Berlin arrested, Sir? HEINEMAN (T.V.) Near the Ross residence .. six a.m. .. MALE REPORTER (T.V.) Who made the arrest? HEINEMAN (T.V.) Sergeant John Taylor. Assist- ed by Sergeant Angelo Serato .. HELENA looks in utmost despair. "Is it true he resisted arrest?" You'll have to put that question to the Chief. I've nothing to add. BOBBY appears somewhere behind the Ladies. T.V. commentary con- tinues. "Meanwhile, Sergeant Berlin remains in a cell at police headquarters arraigned on what is believed to be a $500,000.00 bail. As Mayor Heineman said, this, is a 'sad day' for Eureka." Except for the one face that isn't sad and it belongs to BOBBY. 168: INT. CORRIDOR/CELLS. POLICE STATION. DAY. The cell window is reinforced glass. BERLIN smashes on it like an insane man. TRAVIS (apparently on cell duty) has never seen nothing like this before. CITRINE doesn't want to see any more. BERLIN I'll sign anything you want. Please. Bring here her .. I want Helena here .. CITRINE You ain't talking to no one, till you calm down. BERLIN I am calm .. I am calm .. But he isn't and CITRINE moves off. BERLIN cracks blood out of knuckles on the glass. Hollers up the corridor after the Chief. Get St Anne .. I want St Anne .. 169: EXT. DRIVE. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. Gale still making a mass of the trees. A police Chevy pulls up and TAYLOR gets out. Puts a knuckle on the window of a black & white. A Uniform wakes and TAYLOR interrupts his apologies "Go." And the young Cop does the drive as TAYLOR heads for the house. 170: INT. STAIRS/LIVING ROOM. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DAY. HELENA descends the stairs with her luggage. She's towards the bottom when TAYLOR appears via the kitchen. Lights momentarily stall as the gale sucks their electricity. Ignorant of his pre- sence she loses her bags and disappears into the den. He moves after her and startles the shit out of MARGIE as she comes out. MARGIE Jesus. What are you doing here? TAYLOR Been trying to call, your line's down .. I just wanna let you know we're taking the guard off today. MARGIE heads for a table and unloads a strong-box of documents. Is she going somewhere? MARGIE I'm taking her back to the Instit- ute. Her new term starts tomorrow. He watches her select various papers aware of what she's about. TAYLOR Not gonna try and bail him are you? I really wouldn't bother, Margie .. HELENA reappears wearing a coat and TAYLOR is in generous mood. You want me to drive her? .. I'm through with my shift .. MARGIE No .. I'll drive her .. 171: INT. CELL. POLICE STATION. DAY. Here's a classic twenty-two. BERLIN is consumed with anxiety & rage. But get mad in here and get nothing. No shoe strings and no wrist watch. But a wrist-band like something medical summar- izing his charge. St ANNE sits impassive as BERLIN walks floor. BERLIN I'll sign anything you like - you write it, I'll sign it. But I want her and Margie here. I want an opp- ortunity to talk to them - that's all I'm asking? - That's my deal? .. St ANNE O.K. I'll put it to your Chief? BERLIN Well, you'd better put it to him pretty dammed quick, Mr St Anne, because if you don't, she's dead. St ANNE Didn't push her down stairs on their previous meeting, did he? BERLIN He was up there to plant the gun. St ANNE Did Taylor plant this, too? Produces a Zippo in a plastic sack and BERLIN's senses capsize. Is it yours? A question for which St ANNE expects no answer and he is right. We found "Jennifer Eight." At least, we've found a headless and handless girl. A couple of hunters found her. Maybe BERLIN asks him "Where" or maybe his expression's enough? About 4 miles south of the institute, less than 50 feet from the road. This was less than 100 feet from the body. BERLIN can't believe it and knows St ANNE wouldn't believe him. Is it yours? - (no answer) - I know it's yours? - You know it's yours? The only prints on it are Freddy's? You wanna tell me how it got there? BERLIN wouldn't believe it either. Door open and TRAVIS enters. TRAVIS Margie Ross put up your bond, Sir. St ANNE and BERLIN look surprised. And BERLIN looks at St ANNE. BERLIN Are you getting in the way of it? St ANNE examines the bail/bond paper and raises eyes to BERLIN. St ANNE I don't make the law. 172: EXT. THE ROSS RESIDENCE. DUSK. Music on the cut and this is a crane shot high above the house. A car tears up the drive with the Camera descending to meet it. BERLIN out and into the house. And still the gale howls around. 173: INT. DOWNSTAIRS ROOMS. HOUSE. DUSK. Darkness and silence. Where the hell is everyone? He quicks it to the den, Cartoons on T.V. but no one watching. With escalat- ing concern he hits the kitchen and now he's shouting upstairs. "Margie. Margie." About to climb when BOBBY appears at the top. BOBBY There's no one here. BERLIN Where are they? BOBBY Mom took her back to the institute. BERLIN freezes. He maybe says "What?" He definitely says "When?" I dunno. How come they let you out? BERLIN Is Margie with her? Is she with her? BOBBY No, she came back and went out ag- ain .. gone to see Auntie Charles .. BERLIN has already grabbed a telephone. Aware it's dead before BOBBY tells him "They're all out around here." He wanders down- stairs in apparent oblivion to BERLIN's distress. BERLIN races back to the den and new problems. Desperate to get at the guns but all cabinets locked "Where's the keys, Bobby? I need a gun." They're my Dad's guns. BERLIN Come on, Bobby, for God's sake. I wanna get the man that killed him. BOBBY stares at BERLIN as though he's staring at that very man. BOBBY I hate you .. I really hate you .. He turns away into the darkness. BERLIN looks frantic and with- out options. Smashes the cabinets with a chair. Grabs a 44 rev- olver plus a 12 gauge Remington and the slugs that go with it. 174: EXT. FREEWAY INTERSECTION. NIGHT. Wide over an intersection. Berlin's Chevy crosses a bridge and descends into lights. Music travels with him but the Camera re- mains static. Watches tail lights dissolve into a river of red. 175: EXT. FREEWAY. NIGHT. Tracking back with the car. As yet 100 yards away. Moving fast and getting closer. As it approaches a remote sound of a phone drifts in. And headlights so near now they wipe out everything. 176: INT. CHEVY SEDAN. FREEWAY. NIGHT. Starting to sleet and windshield wipers on. The phone is still ringing like it's at the end of Berlin's brain. Like it's part of his thoughts mixed up with the nightmare he's hearing again. BERLIN (V.O.) Go take a look in his office. It's fulla rattan - that's the connect- ion, that's the "link" - that's why they never got an I.D. - He kills blind girls - put their picture in the newspaper, and 99 percent of the people who know them are blind .. Intercutting BERLIN's fearful eyes with his P.O.V. of the road. St ANNE (V.O.) Havta be a real dope to kill her now, wouldn't he? I mean, we're talking real, full-blown, insane? BERLIN (V.O.) He is insane. His fucken brain's upside down. But he's also very cunning. He's not going after her with a "Pearl Handled Colt," he- 'll just push her down the stairs .. Just the sound of tho phone and the road dissolving into black. 177: INT. CORRIDOR. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. NIGHT. A miserable corridor with the merest of lights. A phone rings somewhere at its end. HELENA is on her way up the corridor and the ringing is louder. Finds keys and walks into her apartment. 178: INT. APARTMENT. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Phone in close-up and the frame widens as HELENA heads towards it. Reaches out and is maybe a second away before it rings off. 179: INT/EXT. PHONE BOOTH. GAS STATION. NIGHT. This is a little country stop some place an the peripheries of the snow-line. BERLIN slams the phone down and runs to his car. Screeches out onto the highway and the Camera begins to ascend. The Camera climbs higher revealing somber mountains. Plus mile upon mile of road he has yet to travel. Still it ascends until the Chevrolet is reduced to an insignificance by the landscape. 180: EXT. SHASTA-TRINITY INSTITUTE. NIGHT. A panoramic over the institute wide enough to include surround- ing forest. Headlights approach down a wooded track and go out. Just possible to see a tiny Figure moving towards the building. 181: EXT. FIRE ESCAPE. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. High on the fire escape looking down. A flashlight arrives bel- ow. Eerie fragmentation of light as the Figure begins to climb. 182: EXT. CHEVY SEDAN/ROAD. SHASTA VALLEY. NIGHT. The highway is winding and narrowed with snow. Couldn't find a lousier road on which to overtake. BERLIN is right up behind a forty ton truck and he's trying to overtake. Hits the horn and tries again. Halfway past the trailer when a bend suddenly rel- eases headlights. An angry claxon and he's forced to pull back. 183: INT. BEDROOM. APARTMENT. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Although curtains are open the room is in darkness. Someone on the fire escape looking in. A flashlight snaps on and a circle of light explores the room. Creeps across the floor and pauses at the bed. Climbs slowly to illuminate HELENA's sleeping face. 144: EXT. FIRE ESCAPE. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. Close-up sound and close-up picture. A glass-cutter scores the window. A nasty noise but you'd have to be wide awake and list- ening to hear it. A gloved fist punches the section out. Falls to the floor and shatters. And a hand reaches in for the catch. 145: INT. BEDROOM/LIVING ROOM. APARTMENT. NIGHT. HELENA is wide awake and listening. Hurrying into her dressing gown with a similar urgency to get out. She arrives in the liv- ing room as the FIGURE is clambering through the window. Panic as she blunders for the front door. Tears it open and vanishes into the corridor. He crosses the room and follows her outside. 186: INT. CORRIDOR/STAIRS. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. HELENA knows the building and moves faster than he may have ex- pected. Green dressing gown and bare feet. White nightgown and blonde hair. The man in black hurries after her. She's already at the swing doors and he's virtually running to stay with her. She bursts through the doors and rushes downstairs. He follows only seconds behind. The wind groans down as they descend. HEL- ENA turns a corner of the stairwell and momentarily disappears. For a moment he loses her! Which way did she go? Downstairs or along the corridor? His anxiety is immediately assuaged. Spots what already looks like a ghost fleeing into shadows. He takes off along the corridor. Getting breathless. But getting closer. Near enough now to sense her fear. Near enough now to grab her. TAYLOR Say night, night, dead girl. As he reaches for her she turns. MARGIE wears a green dressing gown and a blonde wig and has a very big fucking pistol in her hand. TAYLOR can't believe what he's looking at. And for an in- stant neither does MARGIE. Their surprise is mutually stunning. How can it be him? How can it be her? TAYLOR's still trying to work out how they made the switch when the first bullet smacks into his chest. Gets another as he goes down. He crumples in a deadly heap and revenge is completed with two more in the back. 187: INT. LANDING/STAIRS. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. MARGIE barges through the doors. The MYOPIC Janitor is halfway up adjacent stairs peering down. No time for introductions and no time for explanations. "Call the Police. Do it. Now." Shout- ing up at him she's already descending. "Tell em the gymnasium." 188: INT. GYMNASIUM. INSTITUTE. NIGHT. MARGIE patrols plate glass windows. Where are the fucking cops? She's shocked and looks strange indeed. Wig off but hair grips all over her head. An overcoat and shoes but still wearing the nightgown underneath. A couple of dreary lights in the ceiling. HELENA sits numb under one of them all but hidden in a blanket. MARGIE can't stand waiting any longer. "I'm gonna call them my- self." HELENA nods and sure she's O.K. to stay here. The doors settle and she is alone. Headlights cross the windows shifting the shadows of everything. Swooping the walls they move attent- ion back to the door. TAYLOR stares in and then pushes through. Worse for wear but very much alive. Discarded his leather jack- et revealing the bullet proof vest. Blood all over his T-shirt. Looks like he caught one in the shoulder. A bad burn and blood runs from his left hand. In his right hand he clasps the knife. He cracks it open like a whip. HELENA hears it and stands. Ter- ror as the footsteps approach. "Margie. Margie." But Margie is- n't around. He's less than 30 feet away. She tries to back off but is hindered by the blanket. Tries to scream but is stifled with fear. Maybe six seconds to live but this refers to Taylor. "Taylor" He swings around but this time he doesn't get time to look surprised. BERLIN blows the fucker across the room. Solid load slugs weighing an ounce each crash into him. BERLIN keeps pumping the Remington and doesn't stop firing until the magaz- ine is over. No conjecture now. This bastard is very much dead. BERLIN throws the 12 gauge aside. And maybe it means something. Maybe at last he accepts he's stopped living in that world and ready to give himself a chance in this. HELENA in his arms and this is his new world. Flashing lights and headlights flood in- to the darkness. Their embrace goes on. And this story is told. THE END