2:23:00
	Yes, I remember him very well.
2:23:03
	And yet, you still haven't guessed?
2:23:06
	I told you that I'm not
playing games with you.
2:23:10
	Tell me who it was.
2:23:12
	It was Clare Quilty.
2:23:15
	Who was Clare Quilty?
2:23:17
	All of them, of course.
2:23:20
	You mean, Dr. Zemph, he was Clare Quilty?
2:23:23
	Well, congratulations.
2:23:25
	I don't suppose it ever occurred to you
that when you moved into our house...
2:23:29
	...my whole world didn't revolve
around you.
2:23:33
	I'd had a crush on him
ever since the times...
2:23:36
	...that he used to come and visit Mother.
2:23:38
	He wasn't like you and me.
2:23:41
	He wasn't a normal person.
2:23:43
	He was a genius.
2:23:46
	He had a kind of...
2:23:47
	...beautiful Japanese oriental philosophy
of life.
2:23:53
	You know that hotel we stopped at
on the way back from camp?
2:23:56
	It was just by accident
that he was staying there...
2:23:59
	...but it didn't take him long to figure out
what was going on between us.
2:24:03
	From that moment on he was up
to every trick he could think of.
2:24:06
	And he did all these brilliant tricks
for the sheer fun of tormenting me?
2:24:10
	Well, sometimes he had to,
like the German psychologist bit.
2:24:15
	He had to trick you into letting me
be in his play...
2:24:18
	...otherwise how would I ever see him?
2:24:20
	So that's why you wanted
to be in the play?
2:24:22
	That's right.
2:24:23
	The times you were
supposed to be practicing the piano...
2:24:26
	...you were actually with this man?
2:24:29
	I guess he was the only guy
I was ever really crazy about.
2:24:34
	Aren't you forgetting something?
2:24:38
	Oh, Dick.
2:24:40
	Dick's very sweet...
2:24:42
	...and we're very happy together...
2:24:44
	...but I guess it's just not the same thing.
2:24:48
	And l? I suppose I never counted,
of course.
2:24:52
	You have no right to say that.
After all, the past is the past.