The Counterfeit Traitor
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:20:00
- Hello.
- Hello.

:20:07
We're in here.
It's been a long time.

:20:09
The last six months have...
:20:16
I thought we'd
managed to lose you.

:20:18
London felt that since you
and I hit it off so well at the start,

:20:22
I ought to run this little show.
I must say I'm delighted.

:20:25
The food in England
these days is ghastly.

:20:27
Well, it's good
to see you, Red.

:20:31
- Red?
- Yes.

:20:32
Your code name from now on.
:20:34
He's Memphis and I'm Dallas.
:20:36
Don't ask me why.
:20:38
Anything less like a Texan
you couldn't imagine.

:20:40
It sounds rather cloak-and-daggerish,
but it's necessary.

:20:43
Fix yourself a drink.
:20:47
I hear you've done
a smashing job.

:20:50
Even the little children hate you.
:20:53
Yes.
:20:54
I've lost most of my friends.
:20:56
Been dropped from every club
except Book-of-the-Month.

:20:59
Good.
:21:05
Your refinery.
:21:07
What do they call those things
now in the advertising business?

:21:11
Visual presentation, that's it.
:21:14
The Germans admire
thoroughness. It might help.

:21:17
It looks so good I might
even invest in it myself.

:21:20
But London thinks we ought
to protect ourselves on this,

:21:23
in case they turn you down.
:21:25
In order to assure
a flow of information,

:21:28
they feel that
on this coming trip,

:21:30
you ought to recruit some friends
in the German oil industry.

:21:34
I agreed to take
the personal risks,

:21:36
but I am not going to put
anybody else in jeopardy!

:21:39
Many of your German friends
went along with Hitler

:21:42
because it was
good business.

:21:43
They thought it would be a quick war
and they'd profit by it.

:21:47
They might, as you did, be willing
to pay the price of cooperation

:21:50
in order to buy protection
for themselves after the war.

:21:55
- You'll guarantee that protection?
- Definitely.

:21:58
What about your friend
Otto Holtz in Hamburg?


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