:33:04
Good evening.
:33:11
Hello, darling. I didn't expect
to see you tonight.
:33:14
There you are, my dear.
:33:16
In a moment of supreme disaster,
he's trite.
:33:19
You've been reading
too many melodramas, Waldo.
:33:22
I was just telling Ann
about our getting married.
:33:25
Well, have you two
had dinner?
:33:28
Would you like
a glass of wine?
:33:30
Why don't you sit down?
:33:41
I couldn't find out
if she saw Carpenter in the meantime.
:33:45
All I know is that on Friday
she had lunch with Diane Redfern.
:33:50
What came of it,
I hoped to hear that night.
:33:53
- I alternated between moods of
overoptimism and overpessimism.
:33:56
When the phone rang,
I had a foreboding of disaster.
:34:03
I called to tell you, Waldo,
I'm frightfully sorry.
:34:06
I can't have dinner
with you tonight.
:34:09
Oh, no, no. I'm not sick.
I'm just dreadfully nervous.
:34:13
I'm going to the country
for a few days.
:34:15
Yes. I'm afraid
it's about Shelby.
:34:18
Oh, no. Please.
There's nothing you can do.
:34:21
I've got to think
this thing out for myself.
:34:23
I'm sorry. I'll call you
when I get back. Good-bye.
:34:29
It was the last time
I ever heard her voice.
:34:33
I was sure she had
too much pride to forgive him.
:34:37
But-
:34:40
Where does
this Diane Redfern live?
:34:43
Brooklyn somewhere.
She's in the phone book.
:34:47
Come on. It's late.
Let's get going.
:34:50
- Waiter.
- Yes, sir.
:34:56
- All right.
- Thank you, Mr. Lydecker.