Our Man in Havana
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:13:00
You run into a fellow countryman, have
a get-together. What could be more natural?

:13:05
- Where's the gents'?
- Through there.

:13:08
You go in there and I'll follow you.
:13:12
- But I don't want the gents'.
- My dear fellow, don't be crass.

:13:16
- But I don't need it.
- Don't let me down.

:13:19
You're an Englishman, aren't you?
:13:35
Get in.
:13:39
Come in.
:13:50
Keep the water running.
Looks natural if someone barges in.

:13:53
- And of course, it confuses a mike.
- A mike?

:13:55
You're right to question it.
There probably wouldn't be a mike here.

:13:59
But it's the drill that counts.
Just shift that box, will you?

:14:04
No wires?
:14:06
Good.
:14:10
My name's Hawthorne.
You will come to know me better as 59200.

:14:14
I'm in charge of the Caribbean network.
:14:16
- It sounds like the Secret Service.
- So the novelists call it.

:14:20
Why have you picked on me?
:14:21
Patriotic Englishman. Volunteered in 1939.
:14:24
We have to have our man in Havana.
:14:25
Recruit sub-agents, keep an eye on things.
Submarines need fuel.

:14:29
Atomic submarines don't.
:14:31
Quite right,
but wars start a little behind the times.

:14:33
We also need economic intelligence.
:14:35
- Sugar, coffee, tobacco.
- It's all in the government yearbooks.

:14:38
Oh, we never rely on them.
:14:41
Someone's coming.
Mustn't be seen together.

:14:43
- But we have been seen together.
- Don't argue. I know the ropes.


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