03x03 - m*rder and Mozzarella

Episode transcripts for the TV show "Miss Fisher's m*rder Mysteries". Aired: February 2012 to June 2015.*
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"Miss Fisher's m*rder Mysteries" is based on the novels of Australian author Kerry Greenwood. Our lady sleuth sashays through the back lanes and jazz clubs of late 1920's Melbourne, fighting injustice with her pearl handled p*stol and her dagger sharp wit. Leaving a trail of admirers in her wake, our thoroughly modern heroine makes sure she enjoys every moment of her lucky life.
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03x03 - m*rder and Mozzarella

Post by bunniefuu »

(Shrieks) No, no, no!

(Speaks Italian)

(Shrieks)

(Shrieks, speaks Italian)

(Shrieks)

♪ Theme music

♪ CHURCH ORGAN

Priest: And there are new rules you will need to abide by.

New doctrines to accept.

Hugh. Ahem.

Ah, yes. Amen, sir. Father.

And are you willing and able and freely consenting to all that this conversion entails?

I do. I am. Yes.

It is a very solemn choice. Not one to be taken lightly.

(Door opens)

Yes, Father. Dot made that very clear when she made me come here.

Asked me to come.

Father! Father! Father, you must come quick.

It's Nonna Luisa. I think somebody k*ll her.

k*lled her? Where is she?

In the restaurant.

Show me.

Show me. Stay, Father.

This is how I find her, like this.

She's your mother?

Mother-in-law.

(Speaks Italian)

Someone else was definitely here.

And they left by the back door.

You can see the bruises coming up.

They definitely held her by the throat.

(Speaks Italian)

I beg your pardon? Did you just say 'Camorra'?

I say nothing. Silenzio.

Father O'Leary has a telephone at the church. I'll call Miss Fisher.

No, Dottie, we have to call the inspector.

Let's call them both.

But I'm calling the inspector first.

It's my church, Hugh, I do the flowers. You're not even confirmed.

Ladies first.

Excellent timing, Jack.

Although it's fair to say I did have a little further to travel.

Miss Fisher.

Inspector Robinson, this is very bad business. Very bad.

Please come.

But I wasn't sure if the marks on her neck were from bruises or livor mortis.

Because she's face-up, it's more likely to be bruising.

Trust your first instincts, Dot.

Your nonna would like you to be strong, like she was strong, uh?

I'm Phryne Fisher, private detective. I'm so sorry for your loss.

Grazie. Thank you, Miss Fisher.

I was...

Guido.

Do you have any idea who might be behind this?

Excuse me? Those bastard put a fire in my restaurant.

k*ll my wife. And you ask me who do this to Nonna Luisa?

Perhaps we could have a more private chat.

Constable, if you could take a statement.

You know it'll do no good - just like before.

I'll take care of it, Guido. Please.

(Groans)

Jack... I can't help feeling I'm missing half of this conversation.

And I'm happy to keep it that way, Miss Fisher.

What do you think that was about?

The man did say something earlier. It was an Italian word.

Hugh seemed to know what it meant.

It was cam-something. Cama...

'Camorra'?

That's the word, yes.

It's a very old Italian secret society.

Is that like a social club?

It's a little more dangerous than your average social club.

Jack, you didn't think I'd be frightened off by the Camorra, did you?

No, I knew you'd be drawn to it like a moth to a flame - that's why I'm keeping you out of it.

You have no idea how ruthless these people can be.

(Speaks Italian)

(Sighs) Papa, we're gonna have to turn customers away tonight.

Of all the times.

It's the festival of the Madonna, isn't it?

Yes, that's right. It's the biggest night of the year.

People come from everywhere to eat Nonna's food.

And this year she was making special dish, one she not make before.

Man: Guido?

(Speaks Italian)

Guido?

Uh, scusa.

I've seen you before... at church.

Dorothy Williams. Miss Fisher and I...

Work together. Why don't you let us help?

Thank you. Thank you.

Poor Nonna. This will be the end of our restaurant.

You don't cook yourself, Marianna?

Not like Nonna. The dishes she cooked came from the old country.

Special, traditional dishes. I helped her prepare them, that's all.

Were you helping her today?

Nonna had sent me on an errand, we were out of butter.

If I'd been here...

You might be with your nonna now.

Your father won't say a word.

But if you know who did this...

I know. We all know. It's no mystery.

Marianna, enough.

You have to speak up.

Somebody has to do something or nothing will change.

Don't worry, Miss Fisher. Something will be done.

But, Papa.

(Speaks indistinctly)

Papa, no! Please.

Do you know where he's going?

Your father has a g*n and will get into serious trouble unless I can stop him.

Where?!

There's been a feud with another restaurant.

The name.

Strano's.

Ciao, Jack. Good to see you.

Concetta.

Si.

(Both speak Italian)

Concetta. Va bene?

Bene.

So early tonight. But your table is always waiting.

Grazie.

Let me take your coat.

See, I know what you like.

How have you been, Concetta?

Oh. Every day it gets a little easier.

I need to ask some questions.

Is this why you come here tonight? Not to see me but to ask questions?

You heard about Nonna Luisa?

How long you been coming here, Jack?

You know us, you know we hate the Carbone family.

So, something happens, you come straight here.

Who do you think did it? My father? My brother?

Vincenzo?

Si.

Vieni qui.

Hi.

Gianni wants to ask you question about the Carbone woman.

Mm. That family. Whatever happens to them, they deserve.

Who make my sister a widow? Eh?

You know, Jack, the Carbones did that, but you not catch the k*ller.

Vincenzo.

Si.

(Door opens)

(Speaks Italian)

Jack, be careful, he's got a g*n!

(Diners gasp)

You k*ll Nonna Luisa.

Confess! You tell everybody here what you done!

Che dici?

You k*ll Nonna Luisa!

Guido, please, this is only making things worse.

No! How can it be worse? Huh?

My restaurant is finished. That's what you want all along!

Give me the g*n.

No.

Who's next, uh? Your sister? My daughter?

This feud is gonna end, Inspector. Now I'm gonna end it.

(Gasping and shrieking)

Ma sei pazzo!

You, to the station with me NOW!

He k*ll Nonna Luisa. You arrest me?!

I told you I'd take care of this!

I can see how you take care. Eat with them, drink with them.

Everyone will be questioned, Guido. Vincenzo, you too.

To the station. Go.

(Groans)

Everybody, it's nothing.

(Speaks Italian)

That pazzo tries to sh**t me. And I'm the criminal?

The Carbones are being dealt with.

But Guido should be charged. And not just for this.

But for what he did to Fabrizi.

Who's Fabrizi?

My sister's husband.

Gunned down in cold blood. And for what? Ask Guido who sh*t him.

Where were you this afternoon, Mr Strano?

I went to the pictures.

Can anyone confirm that?

Why don't you ask Al Jolson, eh?

It was just me and him and a few hundred other people.

Aspetta.

Heh.

Do you believe him?

Well, if he m*rder*d Nonna Luisa, I'm surprised he didn't work out a better alibi.

You can see why last year's investigation didn't get very far.

How did this whole mess start?

As far as I can tell, a man named Fabrizi tried to burn down Carbone's restaurant.

And did Fabrizi have links to the Camorra?

A week later he was gunned down in plain sight of at least ten witnesses, but none of them saw a thing.

And this Fabrizi, he was the husband of the woman at the restaurant, the one who was, um, brushing down your jacket?

Concetta.

She seemed to know you quite well.

She's an old friend. I believe that's a term I've heard used.

(Man shouts in Italian)

(Both shout in Italian)

Stop. Enough. Both of you!

Per favore, continuate.

(Continues speaking Italian)

They were saying something about an incident at the docks.

If I'm not mistaken, whatever happened at the docks started this whole feud.

Eh.

It's OK. It's OK.

Papa.

I'm fine. I'm fine.

No thanks to you and your family!

Eh!

This is all your fault!

See, they blame us again, eh?

(Both shout in Italian)

Enough!

Now here's what we're gonna do.

Constable Collins is gonna write up the firearm charges and keep them on his desk.

If I hear so much as a peep out of you, the charges are lodged.

Mm.

Then the licensing bureau pays a visit to your restaurant to investigate the serving of alcohol after 6pm.

Please, Inspector, we can settle this outside.

No, no, I'll settle it. For now I'm calling a truce.

Now, did you read the pamphlet?

I've been rather busy at work, Father, but, yes, I have read it.

And did you understand it? Do you have any questions?

Um... just... just one.

Uh, on this page where it talks about the Catholic family...

Yes, the family is very important to our faith.

Yes, but it says here,

'A wife must in all things obey her husband.'

Yes?

That's... not a mistake?

No, that is one of the central tenets to our church's teachings.

After all, Eve was created from Adam's rib in order to serve him.

Do you have a different view, young man?

Oh, no, no, Father, I like that view.

In fact, Catholicism has a lot more going for it than I first thought.

(Door opens)

Buonasera. Welcome to Strano's, Miss... Fisher.

I'm afraid there was no time for introductions earlier.

Niente. Please, come in, join us.

We usually eat after all the customers have gone.

Please sit. Help yourself.

Vino?

Si.

You were wanting something?

Everyone is talking about the feud between your two families.

But there is one thing that no-one will talk about.

What's that?

The Camorra.

Was your husband a member?

I knew nothing about his business.

Seems I didn't know him at all.

Wives are not for talking to.

My grandfather arranged the match.

I stepped off the boat a week before the wedding.

I did not choose my husband, Miss Fisher.

But... I was a good wife.

Salute.

You are a friend of Gianni's? Jack.

A friend, yes. And you?

Si.

He tried very hard to find who k*lled my husband, but it is not easy.

Since then he has dinner here many, many nights.

He must like the food.

He must.

Try some, please.

Ladies, I can sit down?

Of course. Si.

Grazie, grazie.

Signorina, please eat, eat. Look at you, all skin and bone.

Oh.

Papa, he cooks everything.

His father was chef, his father's father.

Tutti quanti.

Mmm, exquisito.

Ah, you like, you like. Good, good, good.

That is real cooking, uh?

Not like the old woman. Her style is casalinga.

'Casalinga'? 'Casalinga'?

Housewife cooking.

Eh, bravo, bravo.

I understand she was preparing a special dish for the Festival of the Madonna.

A special dish. Yeah, you want me to tell you about this special dish?

(Speaks Italian)

You know how I know?

Because that is a recipe from my grandfather's recipe book.

That is a Strano dish from his recipe book, which she stole many years before.

Then why would she prepare the dish now?

To cause trouble. Why else?

Well, it worked.

(Door opens)

(Door shuts)

(Gasps)

(Grunting, gasping)

(Gasps)

Guido.

Are you alright?

I'm OK.

Miss Fisher.

It's a good thing you're handy with a Kn*fe.

If I were a little handier, he wouldn't have gotten away.

Did you recognise him?

If he was not one of the Stranos, he was one of their friends.

Thank you.

What do you suppose he was doing here?

I could ask you the same thing.

I was looking for something.

What do you look for you can't knock the door and ask me?

Well, I wasn't sure you would give me the answer.

The dish that Nonna Luisa was making...

(Speaks Italian)

.. do you know where she kept the recipe?

Si.

She make everything from her memory.

But the Stranos seem to think that she stole it from an old family recipe book, and I can't help thinking that might be true.

Nonna Luisa, she was a woman of many secrets.

But... one secret I know about.

Look.

No recipe book.

No, it's of the old country.

Was this her daughter? Your wife?

Si.

I'm sorry.

Eh. My father used to say, 'There is no future in the past.'

Nonna Luisa made a withdrawal of £77 two days ago.

Do you have any idea why?

Like I said before, Nonna was a woman of many secrets.

Like all of you women.

You hungry? I'll fix you something.

I've already had two dinners.

Two?

Oh, look, I can see you are still wearing dessert.

Mm. Dolce.

Seems a pity to waste it.

Mm. I find some more.

Oh.

Oh, no, no, no.

Please, allow me.

Oh, this must be what heaven tastes like.

Well, if it doesn't, I'm not going.

But then I might not be given the option.

Mm. I didn't know you drank coffee, Jack.

Would you like me to make a full confession?

No, thank you. I prefer a never-ending source of mystery.

Come in, Gianni. Papa is awake now.

Concetta, this is Miss Fisher.

Si. We talked last night.

Did you now?

Buongiorno, Jack. Have you eaten?

Buongiorno. We won't stay long - I just need to see Vincenzo.

Miss Fisher, would you like some bread and some meats?

Oh, tempted, but... Please.

I'm afraid I'm gonna have to ask you to roll up your sleeves.

What for?

Someone broke into Nonna Luisa's restaurant last night.

Whoever it is has a Kn*fe wound to their upper arm.

Apology accepted.

Me too?

Si.

Uno. E due.

Mi scusi. There must be some misunderstanding.

Hm. A lot of things about you I not understand anymore, Jack.

Maybe is better you find some other family to feed you, uh?

Vincenzo, calmati.

So you came back to the restaurant last night.

I had a few questions for Concetta.

Did you get the answers you were looking for?

Too early to say.

When you say 'old friend', do you mean 'old friend' like Dr Mac, or 'old friend' like Captain Compton?

Concetta Strano hasn't saved my life from a burning plane wreck in Madagascar, if that's what you mean.

Can I give you a lift?

No, thanks. I have an appointment at the docks.

What, nosing around?

Don't worry, Jack, if I find anything, you will be the first to know.

No, I'll be the last.

I'm more concerned about you getting in too deep.

Who, me?

Look, these people have been k*lling each other for generations...

I'll be careful.

Promise me you'll be careful too.

(Seagulls squawk)

I thought I was dealing with you two clowns. Who's she?

I'm the one who's paying.

So if you have anything to say, now would be the time.

Did you hear anything or didn't you?

All I know is there was some dodgy business going on with them eyeties a year ago.

Keep talking. The meter's running.

They were bringing in tinned tomatoes.

Tomatoes? That doesn't sound particularly lucrative.

It depends how many tomatoes we're talking about, now, doesn't it?

But a year ago, someone turns the tables, dumps half the bloody shipment of the things in the drink, and the eyeties went off their nuts.

Tried to burn down a restaurant, k*lled someone.

Now, is that what you wanted to hear?

(g*nshots)

Get him out of here!

Come on.

(Moans)

Come any closer and I'll sh**t!

You will sh**t an unarmed man?

What kind of a lady are you?

This kind.

(Speaks indistinctly)
Man: Come on.

Where is this dock worker now?

Royal Melbourne Hospital.

As soon the b*llet's out, Mick reckons he's moving to Fremantle.

That's a wise decision.

And nobody saw who sh*t him?

But if I had a guess, I'd say it was the main man.

Description?

Wiry bugger. Fancy moustache. Big scar running down the side of his face.

Roberto Salvatore. It was only a matter of time before he turned up.

You know him?

He's camorristi, one of the higher ranks.

I suspect he ordered Concetta's husband Fabrizi to burn down Nonna Luisa's restaurant.

And I'm guessing he had an alibi for that.

Several.

Well, at least we know how this whole thing began.

We do?

Tomatoes.

Three people have been m*rder*d over tomatoes?

Well, it's either tomatoes or an ancient recipe - you take your pick.

The Camorra, they forced every restaurant in town to buy from them.

Top price.

If you don't buy, you have accident.

So you decided to sabotage a shipment?

No, no, you don't understand.

We understand completely.

The Camorra were threatening you and so you decided to fight back.

Bravely, I might add.

I like that you think like this.

But no, was not me.

Was Nonna Luisa.

She was not the sweet old lady she pretend to be.

If you push her, she push back.

Poisoned mushrooms?

Death caps, as far as I can tell.

What about the marks on her throat?

I have no doubt she was att*cked, but that wasn't what k*lled her.

There were mushrooms in the dish she was preparing.

That is where it gets interesting. I tested the contents.

Those mushrooms were not poisonous.

So, she was k*lled by different mushrooms?

Ones she would've eaten earlier. They don't k*ll you instantly.

So her attacker and poisoner could've been two different people.

Or one person doing an extraordinarily thorough job.

She'd collect the mushrooms herself from the banks of the Merri Creek.

Could she have made a mistake?

No. She was an expert.

Unless she wasn't wearing her glasses.

I'm surprised she could see anything at all through these.

She didn't like wearing them.

Did your father get along with your grandmother?

Not always.

She blamed him for my mother's death. It made no sense.

Yesterday afternoon your nonna was alone in the kitchen, your father was at the market and you were...?

At the dairy, buying butter.

Well, there's plenty of butter in your kitchen, and I could tell from the colour that it's been there for days.

Not all of your family hate the Stranos, do they, Marianna?

I don't know what you mean.

Oh, I think you do.

I noticed something at the police station last night.

You were worried about your father... but he wasn't the only man you were worried about, was he?

It's OK, I'm fine.

You're in love with Vincenzo.

If my father finds out, or Vincenzo's family, they would rather k*ll us than see us happy.

Well, if you weren't at the dairy, then where were you?

Vincenzo took me to the pictures.

It's the only chance we have to see each other.

My ticket.

Please, you can't tell them.

You don't know what it's like to love someone and know that you can never have them.

Marianna, she told you?

Not as such.

Nonna Luisa found out - is that why you went around there?

No. We were at the picture theatre.

So you say.

Please... if Papa finds out...

Then you need to tell us what you know about Nonna Luisa's death.

I know nothing.

But you know about the Camorra.

There is no Camorra, it's like a myth, a story...

What about Roberto Salvatore, is he a myth?

Who?

We know the Camorra are importing tinned tomatoes.

You know nothing.

I was 17 when I started working on the docks.

I didn't know anyone.

You think the Australian people, they invite me in?

But Fabrizi, he look after me, he introduce me to Rob...

Vincenzo! Omerta.

You should keep your nose out of things you don't understand.

Eh? That's how people get hurt.

Is that a thr*at?

Please, Jack, he doesn't mean...

Papa, aspetta.

Mi dispiace.

He still acts like the big man in the village.

There, people, they fear him.

Papa Antonio is camorristi?

Who do you think marry me to Fabrizi?

This was not for me - it was for him, to set himself up here.

Fabrizi was... He was a pig.

Papa has to learn he cannot thr*aten people here.

Who else has he threatened?

I may be able to stop him before someone else gets hurt.

I heard Papa and Vincenzo last night.

He was saying terrible things.

What he would do to her - to the girl, Marianna.

Scusa. Scusa.

I'll open the doors for the funeral, Father.

Thank you, Dorothy.

Father... do you really believe a wife must obey her husband?

It's not a matter of belief - it's how things are, how they have been since our Lord first created mankind.

Well, perhaps times have changed, Father.

I hardly think it's your place to question, Dorothy.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to prepare for the funeral.

You know I love the Church, Father, but... from what I understand, the Protestant Church has a much more liberal view.

Are you saying that...?

All I'm saying is that this decision could affect a lot of souls - myself, Hugh and at least three or four children, so I will have to think long and hard about... well, everything.

What are you doing here?

The inspector thought it might be a good idea, tensions being high.

I don't understand why people who hated Nonna Luisa would come to her funeral.

Might be to make sure she's dead.

You don't think there will be trouble?

If there is, I've got it covered, Dottie.

♪ FUNEREAL HYMN Roberto Salvatore.

Papa Antonio's the padrino.

Lord, do not call your servant to account... for no-one can stand guiltless in your presence unless you grant him forgiveness of all his sins.

Therefore, we pray, in passing judgement, you will not let your sentence fall heavily on one who is commended to you by the sincere prayer of Christian faith.

But with the help of your grace, may your servant who during life was sealed with the sign of the blessed trinity be found worthy of escaping the doom of your vengeance.

We ask this of you who live and reign forever and ever.

Amen.

Sorry.

Miss, is everything alright?

Yes, Dot. I think everything's starting to make sense.

(Woman speaks Italian)

Miss.

Marianna.

How are things between you and Vincenzo?

I couldn't help noticing at the funeral you slapped him.

It was nothing. It was a misunderstanding.

About?

I understand what it's like.

I feel like slapping my fiance Hugh sometimes, and we're not even Italian.

Vincenzo loves me and I love him.

One little fight isn't gonna change that.

Does Vincenzo know who k*lled her?

Is that what the fight was about?

Please, I buried my nonna today.

I need your help with something.

Is this Nonna Luisa, as a girl?

I'm not sure. Look like her.

Could that be Papa Antonio?

I don't know. Maybe.

Do you think it's possible that they were once in love?

The woman I know not have no love.

You know, when her own daughter die - my wife - she don't cry one tear, not a single one.

She was a bitter, twisted old woman.

If she have a love, she put here, into the food.

Well, I need to ask more people more questions, so thanks for the wine...

Oh, whoa-whoa, no, no, no. Bella, stay.

I'm sorry I can't ravish you, but I still need to find out who m*rder*d Nonna Luisa.

(Speaks Italian)

Perhaps.

But I'm sure it will wear off.

Whoever he is... he's a lucky man.

(Chuckles)

♪ OPERA Where are Papa Antonio and Vincenzo?

At the Cavour Club.

That's why I asked you. So we could be alone.

And Roberto Salvatore?

I have no interest in this man.

My grandfather wants to buy his loyalty, so he bargains with me as if I'm a village cow.

Papa acts like a kind old man but he's not, Gianni...

Concetta, be careful what you say, it's dangerous.

I do not care about these things.

Can't you see?

It is only you I care about.

You are... everything I could ever want in a man.

And I would give myself completely to you, Gianni.

All you have to do is ask.

But your family has so many secrets.

I'd be duty-bound to...

My famiglia...

I would leave them in a breath. For you, Gianni.

I would.

Si.

Si.

Con tutto mio cuore.

They did come from the same village.

And that's where all this hate has sprung from.

It makes perfect sense.

What greater force is there than thwarted love?

Burning the midnight oil, Jack? Grappa will do that.

I'm sure I was up no later than you.

Oh, I was tucked up in bed at a very sensible hour.

If you're waiting for me to ask who with...

That's odd.

Why would Nonna Luisa take out £6 every Thursday?

Wages?

There were none. Only the family worked there.

Shopping?

That all came out of the restaurant account. This was her personal one.

Another one of her secrets.

What did you say you were up to last night?

I didn't.

Then why are you asking me?

No reason. Just called civilised conversation.

(Clears throat)

Yes, I loved Luisa.

But her parents did not approve of my family.

Well, she wanted to run away, to leave all the families.

But how could I leave everything I knew?

Is that when she stole the book?

Well, she stole the book, thinking that I would follow her.

But there's more to life than love.

Where were you on Thursday afternoon?

Where I am always - here. With a good friend of mine.

Your friend's name?

Roberto Salvatore.

How convenient that you can confirm each other's whereabouts.

Concetta?

Si.

Thursday afternoon - where I was?

Here at the restaurant.

And with who I was?

Roberto Salvatore.

We are making arrangements for the wedding.

Roberto will marry my Concetta.

Scusa. Scusa.

I checked those session times at the Davey, sir.

They were definitely Marianna and Vincenzo's.

I've brought Vincenzo in if you want to chat to him.

Thank you, Collins.

The numbers are different, substantially so.

The tickets are torn off in order, but these numbers are not sequential.

So, Marianna and Vincenzo went into the cinema at different times.

I believe that one is Vincenzo's.

Which means he arrived much later.

And had time to att*ck Nonna Luisa before he went to the pictures.

When exactly did you arrive at the cinema the day before yesterday?

I was late. Marianna, she saved me seat.

More than just a little late, I think.

You would have missed the one-reelers, the Wurlitzer Extravaganza.

Not to mention the first 15 minutes of the main attraction.

Don't be shy now, Vincenzo. Not when things are getting interesting.

Did Nonna Luisa find out you were romancing Marianna?

Collins, if you wouldn't mind.

Sir.

It won't be hard to prove you broke in and att*cked her.

You have no alibi and if your footprints match...

Foot on the chair, please, sir.

Hold on a moment, Hugh.

.. 56, 57... 58.

How many should there be?

59.

You have been studying.

Mm-hm.

Should I write up the charges, sir?

Not quite yet. That'll be all, Collins.

Sir.

I can charge him with as*ault, not a great deal more, given the cause of death was poisoning.

That's exactly what I'm thinking.

Phryne?

Well, it's right here, Jack. It's all in the coroner's report.

'Under normal circumstances, Amanita phalloides poisoning would take six to seven hours.

But the patient's compromised liver function means a more likely ingestion period of three to four hours.'

She ate the mushrooms at breakfast.

And there was egg in her stomach, as well as mushrooms.

Frittata di funghi. It all comes back to the food.

Vincenzo's a hard nut to cr*ck.

Even if he knew, I doubt t*rture would get it out of him.

But love might.

It can bring even the toughest men completely undone.

You sure this'll work, Miss Fisher?

Of course I'm not sure.

(Speaks Italian)

Where's Vincenzo?

What, no 'hello', Jack? Where's the respect, eh?

I did not see Vincenzo.

I saw him come in.

(Door closes)

Just relax.

Vincenzo.

Tell me...

Oh, Jack. Basta, please.

(Speaks Italian)

Please, Miss Fisher, Inspector...

(Shouts in Italian)

No.

We not hide anymore!

(Shouts in Italian)

We not hide anymore!

(Concetta interrupts)

(Speaks Italian)

I understand everything!

No!

Everything.

No!

I understand every time that family touches something, they destroy.

She is gonna break your heart, Vincenzo. Like mine was broke.

I don't care what happened in the village all those years ago.

Whoa! Whoa!

I don't care what happened last year or last month - all that matters is what happens now.

I love Vincenzo.

Eh! Love, love...

No.

Marianna, it's OK.

Jack: Step aside, please.

Vincenzo will be charged with m*rder.

There's a slim chance he'll get a lenient judge.

But the most likely sentence is that he'll...

Will hang.

I'm sorry.

I'm afraid Vincenzo isn't the man you thought he was.

Get...

Why do you flinch?

Did Vincenzo do this?

No, he would never.

Your grandmother.

She used a rolling pin.

And what was it that prompted this b*ating?

It never took much.

She didn't like the way the garlic was chopped.

It helps bring out the flavour more if crushed with the flat of the Kn*fe.

But this was about more than that, wasn't it?

She'd found out about you and Vincenzo.

Did Marianna know what you were planning?

No. She knew nothing.

But she found out that you'd att*cked her grandmother and she didn't report you to the police.

Which would make her an accomplice after the fact.

I told you, she knew nothing.

You want to know why?

Marianna... she find this underneath the floorboards where that old woman had hidden it.

She brought it up on herself when she was going to make that dish - a Strano dish.

(Speaks Italian)

My nonno, he always knew she stole the book.

When she announced she'd serve it on the first night of the festival, it was a slap in the face to my family's honour, a disgrazia.

So you poisoned her?

Si.

How?

With the mushrooms.

The death caps.

Yes. I force her to eat them.

When you broke in?

Yes.

I force them down her throat.

This withdrawal of £77... she made it the day before she was k*lled.

And she drew a bank cheque against it to a travel agent.

£77 can buy you a lot of things.

A steamer ticket back to Italy.

She was gonna send me away.

I couldn't go back to the old country.

What would I do in the village? I was born here.

It would've been the end of you and Vincenzo.

It would've been the end of my whole life.

♪ VERDI: Rigoletto - La Donna E Mobile

You had to pick your moment.

♪ VERDI: Rigoletto - La Donna E Mobile

When did you find out that Marianna had poisoned her grandmother?

No. I did this. It was me, OK?

You broke in, yes... you tried to get the recipes back, you tried to sabotage the dish that she was making...

(Shrieks)

.. you didn't try to k*ll her.

Nonna Luisa put up more of a fight than you were expecting.

But it was the mushrooms that did the job.

She'd eaten those hours earlier.

No. No. Please, Jack.

Take me. Please, leave Marianna.

No, Miss Fisher, please, it's my Marianna.

Take me, please. OK?

Take me - not Marianna. Me, I did.

Please, Jack. Please.

It's too late.

You know what she said?

That she'd pay a gunman to k*ll Vincenzo.

She's done it before.

Nonna was the one who paid to have that man sh*t in the Italian workers' club - Fabrizi.

And who was this gunman?

She wouldn't say.

Your grandmother took out £6 every Thursday. Do you know why?

Every Thursday night a man would come to the restaurant.

She was paying the gunman in instalments.

Can you describe this man?

He has a scar.

(Speaks Italian)

(Door opens)

You are not welcome here.

Would you please leave us?

Fine, fine. The man want to talk.

Bene.

Get up.

I prefer to sit.

You'll spend a lot of time sitting in a prison cell.

You're under arrest.

And you come all by yourself?

I have a friend with me you should know about.

Do you have a friend, Inspector?

He has at least one.

Ah... now things are getting interesting.

The thing you should know, Inspector Jack Robinson, is that whatever you do to me, it's not the end of our business.

I will not touch a hair on your little policeman head... but I do know the names of the people you hold dear.

Go ahead and I'll sh**t you right between the eyes, just like your poor old papa's painting.

On the table.

I know you're the padrino of the Camorra.

You think your little foot soldier was loyal to you?

He was playing both families off against each other.

He took your orders to burn down Carbone's, but he also took money to k*ll Concetta's husband.

The feud is over.

Today all past scores are settled.

I'm very pleased with your progress, Hugh.

I think you will make a fine addition to the ranks of the church.

Thank you, Father.

But there is just one little thing to be said - a correction, if you like, a slight adjustment - about the role of the woman in the Catholic home.

Of course, we must take into account modern times.

It goes without saying that nothing is written in stone.

Except the Commandments. Weren't they?

Yes, of course, the Commandments.

But my point is that times are changing and perhaps the role of the woman in the Catholic home will need to change along with them.

Have you thought about it, Gianni, what I am offering to you?

I've thought of nothing else.

First... there is something I need to make sure of.

For myself.

You don't need to say it.

(Speaks Italian)

Your heart is... taken.

I care for you.

You deserve to be happy...

(Speaks Italian)

I will be fine.

And Roberto will hang.

And when I marry again, it will be for love.

But you are taken.

♪ VERDI: Rigoletto - La Donna E Mobile

(Door opens)

The inspector to see you, Miss Fisher.

(Opera continues)

Not eating Italian tonight, Jack?

Strano's is closed.

Looks like you'll have to make do with me.

Looks like we'll have to make do with each other.

Never let it be said that I'd turn down the opportunity of employment.

My brother's gone missing.

A lot of money for a street urchin.

Would've got the bull's eyes from the monster man.

Who's there?

No kid from Collingwood would cooperate with the police.

What about the one I'm looking at?

You're Dr McMillan's friend.

Mary Maddison.

(Shrieks)

You're not taking me alive!

Archie, no!

(Shrieks)

(Gasps)

Care to join me for supper tonight, Miss Fisher?

You are a fast man, uh?
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