:54:01
Two years.
:54:04
And you?
:54:06
Me what?
:54:08
- I mean, how old?
- I'm 44.
:54:13
- Still very much alive.
- I'm quite well, thanks.
:54:17
I mean, your new command
is very much impressed.
:54:19
One of those nice elderly
British guards told me today...
:54:22
you were a hell of a journalist.
:54:24
That's true. I'm a hell of a journalist.
I could make you famous, Willi.
:54:28
Now why don't you tell the lively old
crime reporter why the man's dead?
:54:34
You expect me to tell you
that I killed him, and why?
:54:39
No, you don't have to.
:54:41
I can see your pleasure
in the kill.
:54:45
Can you?
:54:51
Perhaps you can see somebody
who believes in the war...
:54:55
who believes in his people,
his leaders.
:54:58
We kill in a war
for those things, huh?
:55:02
But maybe you don't.
:55:04
I mean, you're lrish and
you're a captain in the British army.
:55:09
That same British army that has killed
your own lrish people for centuries.
:55:14
What do you really believe in?
What kind of order?
:55:16
What laws do you obey?
:55:21
Well, I obey
as few laws as I have to.
:55:25
And I'm not much
of a one for order.
:55:29
It has to be, I suppose...
:55:33
but there's order
and then there's order, isn't there?
:55:38
Death is a kind of order,
isn't it?
:55:43
I mean, Neuchl there,
he's all in order now.
:55:48
But, Willi, that's an awful
lot of shit about your people.
:55:51
You've killed two of them
that I know of.
:55:55
That's not true.
:55:57
You killed him and you probably killed
your commanding officer as well.