Murder on the Orient Express
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:40:00
Ladies and gentlemen.
Please, please, patience.

:40:02
of the sort perhaps patronized
by the princess herself.

:40:04
You must have patience.
Now, you will all get the chance

:40:06
The name of the senior partner
is Debenham.

:40:06
to state your views to Monsieur Poirot
at his own good time.

:40:09
- Now, please...
- It is not good time. It is bad time.

:40:10
Debenham and Freebody.
:40:13
God's laws have been bust,
thou shalt not kill.

:40:14
Was the princess covering
up for our Miss Debenham,

:40:16
And why was I not notified at once,
Signor... Mr. Bianchi?

:40:17
who taught shorthand
in Baghdad?

:40:20
- I was his nearest associate.
- And I was nearest to his murderer.

:40:21
Can she tell us the name
of Mrs. Armstrong's younger sister?

:40:25
Then I will tell you her
Christian and her maiden name.

:40:26
You mean you saw the man?
You can identify the murderer?

:40:29
I mean nothing of the kind.
:40:30
When I asked the Princess
Dragomiroff if she could tell me

:40:31
I mean there was a man
in my compartment last night.

:40:34
the maiden name of her
goddaughter, Mrs. Armstrong,

:40:34
It was pitch-dark, of course,
and my eyes were closed in terror.

:40:37
Then how did you know it was a man?
:40:38
she could not possibly,
as a godmother,

:40:39
Because I've enjoyed very warm
relationships with both my husbands.

:40:40
plead ignorance of this.
She replied...

:40:42
Greenwood.
:40:43
- With your eyes closed?
- That helped.

:40:45
Grunwald is the German
for Greenwood.

:40:47
- Excuse me.
- Anyway, the man smelt of tobacco.

:40:49
Mr. McQueen,
Monsieur Poirot would be grateful

:40:50
The princess's hesitation
persuades me

:40:51
for a few minutes of your time.
:40:53
that Grunwald was
the true maiden name

:40:55
- Excuse me.
- Don't you agree the man

:40:55
of her goddaughter,
Mrs. Armstrong.

:40:57
must've entered my compartment
to gain access to Mr. Ratchett?

:40:58
And that the Countess Andrenyi
:40:59
I can think of no other reason,
madame.

:41:00
is Mrs. Armstrong's
surviving younger sister.

:41:03
Pierre, your passkey.
:41:06
VoilĂ , monsieur.
:41:08
And will you discreetly procure
me a lady's hatbox,

:41:09
Her Christian name is Helena.
:41:12
Not Elena. No, no, no.
:41:13
one of the big, old-fashioned kind,
:41:14
But Helena.
:41:15
perhaps from the
Princess Dragomiroff's maid?

:41:16
And where did she lose
her Christian name's initial H?

:41:20
Give me five minutes, doctor.
:41:20
She lost it under a convenient grease
spot in her husband's passport.

:41:22
Mr. McQueen, I regret
to have kept you waiting,

:41:24
but there has been much to establish.
:41:26
And why was the grease
spot purposely applied?

:41:27
Please be seated. Now,
Mr. McQueen, I should be grateful

:41:30
for anything you can usefully tell me.
What, for example, is...?

:41:30
Because she and her
husband were afraid

:41:33
Let's get just a couple
of things straight first, Mr. Poirot.

:41:34
that this handkerchief,
bearing the initial H...

:41:36
Who, for example, are you,
and what is your status here?

:41:38
...might lead me to suspect her
of complicity in the murder.

:41:39
Excuse me.
:41:41
I swear before God and on my
word of honor as a gentleman,

:41:41
Monsieur Poirot is a detective,
:41:44
officially delegated to investigate
this case by me.

:41:44
that this handkerchief
does not belong to my wife.

:41:46
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Not at...

:41:47
Let us proceed with the matter in
hand. Your relationship with Ratchett?

:41:48
No. No.
No. No. No.

:41:49
It does not.
:41:50
I'm his... I was his secretary.
:41:51
No. Nor does it belong
to Mrs. Harriet Belinda Hubbard.

:41:52
- For how long?
- A year, give or take.

:41:53
- Where did you meet?
- In Persia.

:41:55
Nor to Fräulein Hildegarde Schmidt,
:41:56
He was collecting Gorgan pottery
with considerable success.

:41:59
whose finest quality is her loyalty.

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