01x02 - The Lost Weekend

Episode transcripts for the TV show "m*rder". Aired: March 3, 2016.*
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"m*rder" isn't a whodunnit, It's a whydunnit, featuring crime stories told through a succession of straight-to-camera interviews.
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01x02 - The Lost Weekend

Post by bunniefuu »

This programme contains strong language from the start, and scenes which some viewers may find upsetting.

Bryony: That's what's in my head - that somehow or other he's k*lled her.

She's been trying to tell me for months that she's in danger, from him.

But I can't say that.

Apparently, that's defamation.

Apparently, she's just a missing person.

Apparently, he's got the lawyers and the money, and, apparently, that's what matters.

( Ringing tone )

Operator: 'Emergency. Which service do you require?'

The first time we met, bang, I saw the light.

The first time we met - properly met - she dumbfounded me.

Operator: 'Caller?'

( Rasping breaths )

'Caller?'

She's a vessel of light, Arla.

Emitting light is what she does.

She just has panache, mystique.

That clicky handbag and heels, the perfect hair, never enough time.

And I'm...

Because of who Arla is, she doesn't... she doesn't know the protocol.

She doesn't know how she's supposed to think and behave.

If I had a self image, which I don't really, but if you pushed me... I'd say it was a big, crashing torrent of shitty, f*cked-up brown water.

They don't listen.

They say she has a history of dropping out of sight for a few days.

And I say, "Yeah, of dropping out of sight THERE."

So, if she isn't THERE... where is she?

It's not unusual for her to be gone.

She'll say she's coming for the week, and then, Wednesday, she's gone.

And things aren't properly sorted between her and Alex.

It's complicated, so, I've never said, "You said you'd be here. You've got to be here."

I've never... taken that for granted.

He threatened to come round here once - Alex.

Threatened to come here and drag her home.

I said, "Where IS her home, though, Alex?"

Bryony, on phone: 'He says she's not there. But for all anyone knows, she IS there. Dead.'

The trend today is catastrophism.

Think the worst, it saves time.

Let's all cry wolf all the time, then nothing can ever go wrong.

That's the thinking.

All eventualities will always be covered all the time.

And if we all drop down dead, exhausted, chasing shadows, well, at least we shan't be accused of dereliction of duty.

One 999 call doesn't make it a m*rder, especially not an aborted 999 call.

Bloody trainers, kids who won't go to bed, late-arriving pizzas...

(All 999.)

All urgent catastrophes.

Who else is it going to be?

Music: Something's Gotten Hold Of My Heart by Gene Pitney Bryony Phelps, poster girl for the charity.

Rose from the ranks, lost soul found.

The girl's neurotic and overwrought.

Splashing it all over social media, pointing the finger at Cotterall.

Tweeting, Instagramming, Facebooking.

♪ Something's gotten hold of my heart... ♪

And, generally working up a right old candyfloss of indignation amongst the Tatler types. To which, my superiors are not immune.

♪ Something's gotten into my life ♪
♪ Cutting its way... ♪

But slapping a writ on her?

♪ Turning me up, turning me down... ♪

That smacks of more money than sense.

She said I was the one who could tell her the most because I knew Arla at work and as a friend.

And as a client, too.

I'm living proof of what Arla is capable of.

I'm not saying they ALL turn out like me.

The kids we deal with, they don't always have the best start in life.

That's the whole point of Liferaft.

We were both at some horrible function at a gallery and she was momentarily alone, looking at a painting.

So, I cascaded over to her and she just smiled, and put out her hand and said that she was Arla and that I was Dominic, wasn't I, and that she was very pleased to meet me.

She said, "What do you think of the work? I think it's very... kinetic. Are you buying?"

I couldn't think of a single thing to say.

She would never have missed the AGM, never.

This organisation was everything to her.

I just told her that I'd only ever liked one painting in my life, and that one turned out to be a fake.

I stole it from my dad when I first left Abbedon.

After I f*cked his second wife.

She was a fake, too.

A number of people have made it their life's work to traduce Dominic's reputation.

Gossip columnists, journalists, paparazzi, barristers, ex-wife, ex-girlfriends, ex-friends, friends.

His mother.

To a good extent, he's brought it on himself.

But if people want to bandy my eldest son's name around the nightclubs of Mayfair just because some dizzy girl's gone walkabout... they have to be taught... there's a price to be paid.

'Hi, this is Arla. Talk to the beep.'

( Voicemail beeps )

Bryony: Where is she?

Arla Beckman, 35, US citizen.

Lived here most of her life.

Parents made a fortune in the fitness industry, then sold up, turned philanthropist and set up Liferaft.

She runs the UK arm, big benefactor, considered a great beauty.

Married to a banker, Alex... somebody.

Eton, Cambridge.

According to a magazine interview, the landmark she'd most like to spend a night in is the London Eye.

Maybe somebody should look there.

Left work on Friday the 17th at 3:04pm.

Nice hours if you can get them.

"She was at Dominic Cotterall's house," she said. "I know she was."

I said "I know she was, too. He told me."

Spent the entire weekend there, left the Monday morning.

Little face fell a bit at that.

"And," I said, "there's been other instances in the past six months of her being incommunicado for three days or more."

Phone off, no cash withdrawals.

Lost weekends.

Face fell a bit further.

"Any idea where she spent those?" I said.

I didn't catch her reply at first, I had to ask her to speak up.

Then I heard her.

"His," she said. "His."

He'd kidnap her, abduct her.

There's no other way of putting it.

People don't realise the toll it takes on her, being good.

On anyone.

Everyone needs a release.

She was always saying that Dominic wasn't right for her.

He used to beg her, she wouldn't go otherwise.

Maybe I'm not her release any more.

He wasn't right for her - she told me.

Thoughts of him would creep up on her, though, build up in her.

Or her defences would go down and she'd forget what he was like.

And she'd go back.

"What else did he tell you?" she said, "Dominic."

I said, "He told me you'd been round to his house a number of times in the last few months looking for Arla. That more than once she'd had to tell you to go away and, eventually, he'd had to thr*aten you with an ASBO. Is that right?"

She wanted to know all about Liferaft UK, and what we did, and whether Arla had had any fights or arguments with any of the people in the organisation, or any of our clients.

I said it wasn't our clients they should be talking to, it was him.

She said they already had.

She said she'd talked to him at his house.

So, that lawyer can go f*ck himself, thank you very much!

I said, "I suppose, there may have been one or two... grievances."

But they didn't come to anything.

In rehab, we had to write a letter to ourselves from our addiction.

"Shitface" - that's what my addiction called me.

Calls me.

It's calling me now.

I am the site of an addiction.

I'm a host body for narcotics, that's all.

I'm nothing but that.

I'm Shitface.

( Inaudible )

His reputation precedes him but I found him personable enough.

He invited me in, shook my hand.

There were reporters shouting to him from across the street.

No cup of tea, but that's not uncommon.

I said, "If you don't mind, I'd like to take this step by step."

He said all he wanted to know was where she was.

I said, "Ms Beckman arrived here on Friday evening and left on the Monday morning. Is that correct?"

He said it was.

I asked him how they'd spent their weekend.

He asked me if I wanted the lie or if I wanted the truth.

I said, "The truth."

He said "Indulging in sex and dr*gs and rock and roll."

"Without very much rock and roll."

I said, "When she left, what would you say was her state of mind?"

He said, "What do YOU think?"

I said, "At this stage, I try NOT to be thinking too much.

"I prefer to just marshal the facts."

He said he was still asleep when she left, that she had a work function to attend.

They'd gone to bed at about 4am, and when he woke at 3pm she was gone, as he'd expected.

He said those were the last dr*gs he was ever going to take.

And he asked me to exercise professional discretion and overlook the admission which was only made in pursuit of the truth!

DCI Goss wanted to know if I'd heard Arla make a 999 call.

She said it happened in or near my house, though they were analysing it further to pin it down more.

I'd already told her, I'd heard nothing.

When I woke up, she was gone.

I said, "You're getting me worried now."

She said, "Believe me, three nines don't add up to what they used to."

Took me a second to realise it was a joke.

I told the policewoman about Arla splitting up from Alex and how she got the flat then, but she doesn't stay there much.

She stayed with me at first, upstairs at Liferaft.

But then she got the flat.

The policewoman said, "And is she happy?"

Did I think she was happy?

Maybe she did say she loved him, but she would laugh at him too, take the piss out of him.

I'd tell her exactly what I thought of him and she would laugh and she would say that it was true.

I'd say maybe that should be the last time she went round there.

And she wouldn't disagree.

She WOULDN'T disagree.

She's done me a good turn.

She came, she went, we had six months together.

And I know which way my life has to go now.

I'm 35 years old, and for the first time in my life, I really know what I have to do, which is stand up and be a Cotterall.

I don't care what anyone out there is saying.

That's what I'm going to do.

There have been Cotteralls at Abbedon Hall since 1592.

I'm the next in line, the son and heir.

HE CONTINUES: Come on.

And Dad's on side, thank Christ.

At last.

Ten years he's been trying to get me to renounce my inheritance.

Not now.

Finally, he can see it.

I'm going to be pulling up trees.

"Stay put."

That's what he told me.

"When he's under att*ck, a Cotterall never runs.

"Stay put, otherwise they'll think you're running scared."

The most derogatory word in my father's lexicon -

"scared".

I had a life chockfull of false storms.

I've been in and out of rehab like it was Club Med.

But this time it's different.

This time I can look myself in the eye, right in the eye.

It's for real. This time, I'm going to be pulling up trees.

So, Arla, wherever you are... I salute you!

"Have you heard of this person and this person and this person?"

She had photos, like police photos. I said, "No."

She said, "That's because they're not dead. They're all people who went missing and then turned up. This one went missing for two-and-a-half years."

The policewoman said... "Maybe you're just a little bit in love with her, Bryony. Are you sure that that's not what this is all about? And, by the way, where were YOU on that Sunday afternoon?"

Woman: 'Hey, Arla. Just flown in from Paris, if you fancy catching up...'

Man: 'Hi, Arla, it's Jimmy. Seeing if you're free next Sunday?'

Woman: 'Hi, Arla, can you give me a call back? I'm at the office...'

'Let's meet up...'

17 phone calls in 24 hours from phone numbers that cross-reference with the Liferaft organisation, midday Sunday to midday Monday.

Some of them were from her colleague, Bryony Phelps, number ending 1-2-8.

A good number of them were from a different number, ending 7-4-6.

The first one she answered.

The rest, she didn't.

Phone registered in the name of Hamad Latif.

Whenever she wasn't where she was supposed to be, this is where she'd be.

I came round here once, looking for her.

He was stood at the door, dripping wet with a towel around his waist.

He said I could come and look in the pool.

He said she wasn't there, but if she HAD been, this is what they'd be doing.

This, and this, and this.

All the way down the stairs, he listed things.

I didn't want him to see that he was upsetting me, but he knew he was. He found it very funny - upsetting me.

He... It was like a... like an impulse in him, like a reflex.

He had an absolute f*cking aptitude for it, so I don't know why I took that, really.

I did it for her.

He asked me if I'd ever done it in a swimming pool.

I said, "Is that what YOU do? You and her?"

He tapped his nose.

I said, "Anyway, I know what you do. You just told me what you do."

I suddenly had this overwhelming urge to knock him over and f*ck his brains out, just to show him he didn't know me the way he thought he did, like I was so easy to know.

He took my hand and he pulled me over to the corner of the pool, where the ladder was.

He was naked.

I thought, "This is what it's like... to be her."

I asked him what he thought Arla would say if I told her that he'd propositioned me.

He started going down the ladder.

He still had hold of my hand.

He let go of my hand and he lifted my foot and he put it on his shoulder He said...

"Push me down.

"Push me under."

I didn't know what he meant.

I pushed him down with my foot, he was pushing against me.

He said, "Harder!"

I pushed him down and his head went under.

He pushed back up. He was...

He was strong, so I got hold of the rails at the top of the ladder and I pushed him down really hard.

I twisted my heel into his shoulder and he went right down under.

There was a... a little cloud of blood in the pool.

He went down deeper than I could reach and he came up away from the steps and he stood there looking at me, and he said...

"There. That's what we do. Me and her, that's what we do."

I asked her afterwards if she'd been there - upstairs, listening.

She said she hadn't.

The policewoman asked me why I ran after her when she was leaving work.

It's on the CCTV.

I said, "Because she forgot to say goodbye. I was in the kitchen and she forgot to say goodbye."

She looked right through me.

After everything she said.

( Machine hisses )

I just wanted to make her see me.

She knows me.

She knows I'm hot-blooded.

She knows that.

She should've known that.

Because of who Arla is, she doesn't...

She doesn't know the protocol.

She doesn't know how she's supposed to think and behave and...

Oh, my God! That was so refreshing!

Won't give his name, but it's him all right.

Hadn't been seen since Sunday night.

Hamad Latif.

It's become a m*rder inquiry.

Nothing's actually changed, she's still missing, but... a shift in what I'm expected to find.

People say we investigate the rich with more vigour than the poor, we investigate the dead with more vigour than the living.

I'll give them that.

Resources, manpower.

The living are commonplace, I suppose.

The dead teach us a lesson.

( Inaudible )

Arla loves Hamad.

He is one of her favourite people.

He has issues, he can be a pain in the arse, but you can't dislike him. You can't.

He would never hurt her.

He would never hurt her.

Otherwise, obviously, I mean, I wouldn't have...

The coffee shop where he works is around the corner from Dominic's place.

According to the manager, she didn't notice him and he took exception.

She did, she mentioned it.

Exception enough to warrant a 999 call on her part.

We wanted to help him. We did help him.

But, sometimes you have to look at the amount of time and energy you're putting into one person. That's what Arla said.

"Gobby," that's all she said. He was gobby. "Gobby, as usual."

And he had the job!

That was us.

He was happy with the job.

He said he was happy with the job.

"Do you want fries with that?"

She thought it was a joke, it was a coffee shop.

"Don't forget the many because of the one, don't forget the one because of the many." Arla was always saying that.

She hadn't heard him, he was the one making the coffee so he had his back turned to the customers.

She was more or less out of the door, she said, and then this thing about fries.

And he came round from behind the counter.

The police wanted to know why he called her so many times and why she didn't answer.

She loved Hamad.

Everybody loved Hamad.

And he was happy with the job!

He told me he was happy.

Otherwise, why would I have given him her number?

( She pants )

( Inaudible )

Suppose he followed her.

Suppose he followed her and waited for her.

I know these kids, they're messed up. I've met them.

It won't be him.

Suppose he followed her here and waited for her outside.

Suppose he took her and she's dead!

It won't be him.

He did it.

He k*lled her.

( She pants )

( Muffled screams, rustling )

( g*nsh*t, muffled screams )

( Panting )

I'm sorry!

( Office hubbub )

You imagine, when you get into this work, you'll be pitting your wits against criminals, working out motives and means, confronting offenders with the fruits of your labour, watching them squirm on a hook.

It's better to simply gather up facts in quantities which make it hard for a suspect to come up with an unincriminating explanation.

Accumulation of detail is intimidating for someone who's not telling the truth.

It's the doggedness, the rigour. It unnerves them.

I'm not necessarily saying I can explain what I'm presenting, but I don't have to.

I'm just saying, "Look at this, and this, and this.

"And now look at what YOU say.

"How come they don't tally up?"

Hamad Latif says that he just wanted to say sorry.

That's all he'll say.

That's why he phoned her all those times - he just wanted to say sorry to her.

And, also, he's sorry now.

I asked him why he was sorry now.

He put his head on the table.

I asked him where she was now.

He kept it there.

If you gather up all the video from all the security cameras on this street, where Dominic Cotterall lives, and there are a good number, and some of the residents are rich and powerful and don't necessarily care to share data with the likes of police officers - even me.

But if you're polite and persistent, and give off the air of someone who's never actually going to go away unless and until you get what you're asking for, you will receive, eventually, a response.

And if you cobble that together across a timeline, you get a portrait of the comings and goings between midday on Sunday, when Arla Beckman left without her heels or her nice Hermes bag, came back half an hour later with two coffees... and 5:00 on the Monday, when Dominic Cotterall drove away in his car to visit his father.

The portrait's pretty comprehensive.

It includes Hamad Latif.

I asked Latif why he was walking round the square for nearly an hour on a Sunday.

He just said he was sorry.

I asked him why he's phoned her all those times, he said he was sorry.

I asked him where she was now.

"Sorry."

I asked him if there wasn't anything he could tell us that would help us find her. "Sorry."

Bangs his head on the table and cries like a girl. "Sorry, sorry."

Always sorry.

Sorry.

I don't think I've ever met a man so sorry.

And he is.

He's all over the CCTV, he's all over the phone records.

He's all over all of it like a rash.

Something that's not there is also very striking.

Arla Beckman goes into Dominic Cotterall's house with two coffees on Sunday afternoon at 12:06... and never comes out.

When I woke up... she was gone.
Don't touch the product.

Know your customer.

Be indispensable.

Three principles - don't touch the product, obviously, first and foremost.

Know your customer, two.

And three, be indispensable.

This life holds a plethora of temptations.

Opportunities to indulge or abuse yourself.

And the path of rectitude and sobriety is f*cking hard to find, and harder still to navigate.

When you have wealth, all the more so.

When you're born into wealth and entitlement, all the more so, squared.

Everything that the rest of us take for granted, basically, where your wits run when it f*cking runs out, is that bit less obvious to the chauffeur-driven classes.

The principle of action and consequence are far from clear to a man who's never washed up a porridge pan.

What do I mean by indispensable?

I mean, being there to fill in the gaps between knowledge and appreciation between your client and cold, hard reality.

Oftentimes, that class of person cannot infer from the facts of what's going down.

If you can be their agitant, their officer providing enlightenment, you can make yourself a very nice living.

As long as you remain aware you barely register as human, you can be indispensable.

For those moments when life strews extraneous objects across the carriageway... that need to be removed.

So, that's why I don't like it when I get called a drug dealer.

It's like calling Katrina a breeze.

I learnt this sh*t at Lehman Brothers.

They don't say, "You can't come in till your father gets here."

If he ever f*cking does.

They don't say, "Your disreputability stinks like sh*t on your shoe and all of London's calling you a m*rder*r behind your back."

They just say, "Can we get you a drink and the day's paper?"

Out here, to the foyer, with the florists and the bicycle couriers.

When you get expelled from school, they don't ever quite tell you.

One moment, you're galloping onto the playing fields in your rugger kit, the next you're sat on the back seat of a car, next to your trunk, and your father's in a black mood in the front stinking of Scotch and Sobranies.

Eton was out of the question after that, of course.

That's all he said, all he had to.

Ten years old and already in the wilderness.

( Laughter nearby )

The detective wanted to know whether there was any way Arla could have got out of the back.

The CCTV shows she definitely didn't leave by the front.

Did I mind that she'd brought a forensics team with her?

Was it OK that they had a poke around?

Did we sleep with the window open?

Was it possible that someone like Hamad Latif could've have got in during the night?

Presumably I'd been sleeping very heavily.

Given the circumstances, she'd lost her deference.

I said, "I suppose if someone came through the side entrance gate of the mews house at the back, across their yard and climbed over my garden wall, then, theoretically, yeah."

"Well, then, theoretically, Arla could've gone out that way?"

That's what she said.

She said she thought the people at the house at the back would've noticed something. She'd send an officer round to enquire.

I said, "I wouldn't bother. It's owned by some artist woman, and she's only ever there during the summer."

She seemed struck by that.

( Woman calls out )

'Good boy!'

I asked him if she'd taken the picture.

There was a picture missing from the wall.

I asked him if she'd taken it with her when she left.

He said, no, HE'D taken it.

It belonged to his father and he'd taken it to give it back to him.

It was something she'd always encouraged him to do - reconcile with his father.

I said, "You swore off drug abuse and reconciled with your father, but this was just an ordinary day? Are you sure you didn't fight? You sure she didn't say it was over, and then you fought?"

'Oh, my God...'

He's craving narcotics. It's like a fever in him.

Makes him eager to please, vulnerable to the right tone of voice or line of questioning.

"She went in," I said, "but she appears not to have come out. How can that be?"

For a moment, I thought he was about to confess.

The look he gave me was almost imploring.

Then he offered me a cup of tea.

( Ringing tone )

( He sighs )

I used to be able to recite the name and date of every Earl of Monmouth from 1592 until now.

There's not as many as you might think.

We're a long-lived bunch of bastards.

2,000 acres, with a wall around it.

( Rustling, panting )

( g*nsh*t )

What Hindley and Brady would've given for that!

The first acquitted himself valiantly against the Armada alongside Drake at Gravelines.

And the Queen showed her gratitude by bestowing the title and a great parcel of land upon him.

His name was Thomas Cotterall, 1592.

The house he built was destroyed by fire in 1708.

I told him I was surprised he wasn't inviting his brief.

He opened his mouth to speak, but then he closed it.

It seemed to me that that brief wasn't available to him any more.

His father's brief.

( Ringing tone )

Cotterall blood is a heady brew.

You have to know how to handle it.

Like others before him, Dominic wanted to staunch it or cauterise it, and miscegenated with girls from the seamier parts of town.

His body rejected it.

It chafed inside his veins.

I used to steal a look at my dad out from under my arm when he was kicking me.

I'd think, "Name, Greville Norman Cotterall. Assumed the title, 1983."

Kicking.

Sometimes he was spitting, swearing, cursing.

Morris Cotterall, 1951.

Howard Cotterall, 1927.

And up there on the wall, the painting.

With an effort of will, I could lose myself in it.

Charles Cotterall, 1889.

"What are you?!" "Scared."

"What are you?!"

"Scared. I'm scared!"

And the painting, so quiet, no sound, even the colour's muted.

"Why haven't you called Miss Beckman since she left on Sunday?"

William Cotterall, 1857.

Charles Cotterall The Elder, 1833.

The only colour in the painting.

The ploughman's shirt.

Right there in the middle.

I would latch myself onto that, the ploughman with his plough, centre stage!

So vivid in his shirt.

"Why did you go and visit your father when you haven't seen each other in a decade?"

Richard Cotterall, 1802.

Everything in its place, orderly and benign.

Only that silly chap drowning himself.

Making a big production, disturbing the peace.

And that was me.

And I'd think, soon enough, the waves will close over him and he'll be forgotten.

And there'll be peace.

There'll be peace.

That same blood... runs through Laurence's veins... like liquid silk.

For ten years, not a word passes between father and son, until the day Arla Beckman goes missing.

On that day, he drives to the Cotterall stately home in 2,000 acres, with a bubble-wrapped package. Comes out through the front door.

But somehow manages to leave bubble wrap on the gate of a mews house round the back.

The painting.

A painting his girlfriend encourages him to return to his father to promote reconciliation.

I asked him, "Was she pleased about that?"

Or was she gone before he even took it off the wall?

Dad isn't coming.

That was clear to them inside long before it was clear to me.

Your father slapping a writ on Bryony Phelps was never going to calm things down, it was always going to stir things up.

He didn't have my back.

He didn't have my back at all.

He just saw right through me, like he always did.

He opened his doors and he sat me down and he heard me out.

And he nodded and he smiled.

And he put his hand on mine, and he sent me into the lion's den.

Again!

List the list.

All the earls and their dates.

Shut your eyes and think of England.

I told him she was missing.

But he KNEW I'd k*lled her.

He knew I'd k*lled her, and why... and he didn't care.

This looks interesting.

( Electronic beeping )

( Running, panting )

( Panting )

( g*nsh*t )

( Dog barks )

What have you found there, boy?

Radio: 'No formal identification has taken place, but police say they believe the body, which was found in rose bushes beside the crematorium building, to be that of Arla Beckman.'

( Mobile phone rings )

So, not in the London Eye after all.

Sadly: Shame.

She was happy.

The policewoman, she asked me that - "Was she happy?"

She was.

I didn't like it, but she was.

I knew she was going there when she didn't say goodbye, and I ran out after her.

I actually left the meeting to run out after her.

I said, "You're seeing him, aren't you? I know you are!"

I was shouting. I said, "He doesn't care about any of this. He doesn't care about any of us. Can't you see that?"

( She sniffles )

"He makes me happy," she said.

"Get it in your head."

She said she'd rather be happy than right.

She said I was right, and Alex was right, and Liferaft was right, but none of us made her happy.

And Dominic was wrong - and he did.

But I wasn't right... and now she's dead.

I love you just as you are.

"I love you just as you are." That's what she said.

Loved by her... my life made sense.

I made sense.

Loved by her, she could love me.

And that changed everything.

Everything.

And then I k*lled her.

I had a contact at the crematorium...

Arranged to leave the door unlocked for me that night.

Furnace lit.

The door was locked, the contact was nowhere about, not available on his mobile.

All the predictable bullshit of normality.

I lay her down when I tried to call him.

Security patrol arrived.

I lay down beside her.

We were face-to-face.

They were eating kebabs with the car doors open.

Then they got out for a smoke.

One of them took a piss.

There were bats flying about.

I started thinking about how I might have to k*ll these guys if they saw me.

Started wondering about the rights and wrongs of that, putting aside any question whether I could even do it.

She arrived in such a very good mood.

It seemed to say, "This is it.

"Everything has changed. I can save you."

Both of us. And, with her, I could do it.

She was always saying, "Let's just fly away to Zanzibar!"

And, this time, I said, "Yes! Yes, let's! Let's just grab a bag and a passport and let's, for f*ck's sake, just go! Let's chuck all this sh*t down the lavatory. All the powder and the pills, even the booze, we're done with it! A new world awaits us!"

She said, "Why don't we just use up what we have?

"Why waste it?"

The game wasn't over for her yet.

It still had mileage in it.

And I had a startling realisation that when it was eventually over... she'd call up Alex and they'd both be sorry and they'd start afresh.

It started as a joke on him, and it would end as a joke on me.

And the joke was this...

I wasn't good enough.

I would never be good enough.

And that's what she wanted.

I was lying there for a long time.

And this was the self-appraisal I came up with.

I'd fallen for my own propaganda.

I could smell dog sh*t.

I was cowering in the dirt beside a dead woman in a graveyard.

For what?

For Dominic Cotterall?

It must've been two in the morning.

He was, what, ten?

And he'd been jacked out of school.

We'd barely said a word in the car all the way home.

I woke him with a r*fle in my hands, took him downstairs by the scruff of the neck, and out.

To here.

He was shaking.

He probably thought I was going to sh**t him, then and there.

And, perhaps I should have.

He kept looking... at the r*fle.

I said, "Run."

I said, "Run!"

"Run! Keep your eyes tight shut, and run as far and as fast as you can, boy! Run until you drop! Until you drop, boy! And you'll still be on Cotterall land!"

( Rustling, panting )

( g*nsh*t )

( He cries out )

( g*nsh*t )

( He pants )

( g*nshots )

( Sound distorts, he pants )

( Distorted g*nsh*t )

'So, that's what we did.'

We gathered up everything and anything we could find and we laid it out on the table there. We binged.

We were like mad things.

And when she crashed out, I kept going.

Like you said, "Why waste it?" I kept going.

( Distorted screams )

When I woke, she was... dead.

She was cold and there was... froth in her mouth...

And I was on my knees.

I was on my knees, shaking her and... her phone was there so I snatched it up and I called 999 and they said, "Which service would you like?"

And I thought... I suddenly thought, "None of these services are going to do her any good at all, or me."

And then, she sort of lurched.

Just once.

And there was a... terrible noise from her throat, briefly.

And they were saying, "Which service, caller? Which service?"

And I thought about Abbedon Hall.

I thought of my father.

The first earl and the 31st.

The names and the dates, the unbroken line.

And I rang off and called Kendrick.

For the first time in my life, I'd started to think like a Cotterall.

And when we finished speaking...

I waited for... for her to go.

I don't know how long it took... but I let her go... to become a Cotterall.

Like my father.

He stayed out there all that night and the following day.

I heard later that he'd soiled himself.

He stole that r*fle from me eventually, along with a painting.

It was the gamekeeper brought him back.

He'd probably be out there now... if he hadn't.

Father's on his way round.

I've told him this time I'll make it worth his while.

Renounce my inheritance in favour of Laurence.

You think you can kick free of stuff.

Corrosive reputation, drug chaos lifestyle, family history, but they're not things you do - they're things you ARE.

( He sobs )

Our family history is a catalogue of black deeds.

K*llers, rapists, madmen...

Bad blood.

Bad all the way back.

We're like some terrible undead creature traipsing through the centuries.

The Cotteralls.

f*ck!

This isn't something that I take lightly.

It's not a victory to crow over.

I intend to give it to Dad.

Both barrels.

I've asked her to go easy on Kendrick.

He was only doing what he was asked.

When you lie in bed here at Abbedon... in the blackness of the night, surrounded by these 2,000 acres, these fabled acres... and the house is still and quiet... you become one with your ancestors... who lay precisely here, thinking perhaps precisely that.

The shoes Arla was wearing when we first met.

The colour, she said it was... "vermillion".

It was almost obscene.

Luminous, like she was.

I think it's the sexiest colour I've ever seen.

I wanted to paint my house that colour.

Not just my house, my whole life.

Vermillion!

Just saying it sends a shiver down me.

I actually got down on all fours so that I could stare at her shoes.

She was laughing.

She wore them the first time she came, so that we could match the colour.

Vermillion.

It was the colour of the ploughman's shirt.

( Door bell rings )

Music: Ebben? from La Wally by Alfredo Catalani

( Lock clicks )

Dominic!

( Music intensifies )

Dominic!

( g*nsh*t echoes )

♪ Something's gotten hold of my heart ♪
♪ Keeping my soul and my senses apart ♪
♪ Something's gotten into my life ♪
♪ Cutting its way through my dreams like a Kn*fe ♪
♪ Turning me up, and turning me down ♪
♪ Making me smile... ♪
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