Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror
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:26:00
'til Britain's proud
head is in the dust

:26:02
where it belongs.
:26:03
People of London,
:26:05
look out of your windows,
:26:06
you will see your
promised disaster

:26:08
written across the skies.
:26:12
Lawford, turn out
the lights please.

:26:14
Look to the east
end of your docks.

:26:15
Are you alert, Number 20?
:26:17
Look, Britain, look, and
wonder, and despair.

:26:22
We Nazis keep
our promises.

:26:25
There's a terrible
fire in the east end.

:26:28
American bombers, tanks,
gone, destroyed utterly.

:26:33
The flames are mounting
:26:35
higher and higher
and higher.

:26:37
Now the glare
must be visible

:26:38
even to the
short-sighted leaders

:26:40
of your bewildered
government.

:26:42
Watch the towering fires
:26:45
they consume your new
planes from America,

:26:47
your meager
store of tanks,

:26:49
your puny munitions,
:26:51
and your food.
:26:53
Planes that were
your only defense

:26:55
against our all
powerful Luftwaffe.

:26:57
Tanks and munitions
that you prayed

:26:59
would hold against
the magnificent

:27:01
50-ton German
land monsters

:27:03
which will soon be
crashing through
your very houses.

:27:07
Turn it off.
:27:30
Gentlemen,
:27:31
this is really a
terrible setback.

:27:32
How do they find
out our secrets?

:27:34
It's horrible,
:27:35
the way it's timed,
the precision of it.

:27:36
It's not so precise.
:27:38
Almost precise.
:27:39
What do you mean?
:27:40
I should call it exact.
:27:42
No, the fires
actually broke out

:27:43
some time before the voice
:27:45
called to his
operative in London.

:27:46
Jove, that's true.
:27:48
And last time, the
train disaster,

:27:49
Captain Shore was on the
telephone immediately

:27:51
and Scotland Yard
knew all about it.

:27:54
The derailment
must have occurred

:27:55
at least
10 minutes earlier.

:27:57
That's certainly possible.
:27:58
Even so, what of it?
:27:59
No mystery, nothing
supernatural,


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