Murder on the Orient Express
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1:21:02
I was yarning with young...
What's his name?

1:21:04
McQueen, in his compartment.
1:21:06
He was interested in the future
of India, a bit impractical.

1:21:10
He thought the British
ought to move out.

1:21:12
How long did you stay yarning
after that?

1:21:16
Till 1:30. It's...
1:21:20
It's what I call a three-pipe yarn.
1:21:23
Colonel Arbuthnott, you are the only
passenger in the Calais coach

1:21:27
who smokes a "pipe".
1:21:31
- So it would appear.
- Then this...

1:21:34
...must be your "pipe" cleaner.
1:21:39
- It's the same brand.
- It was found in an ashtray

1:21:41
by the dead man's bedside.
1:21:43
Then someone planted it there.
It's a used "pipe" cleaner.

1:21:48
Or are you suggesting
that I'm fool enough

1:21:51
to have entered Ratchett's cabin,
murdered him,

1:21:53
cleaned my "pipe" and dropped it
in the ashtray before leaving?

1:21:57
No, Colonel Arbuthnott.
1:22:00
Miss Debenham.
1:22:04
- Can I stay?
- No, Colonel Arbuthnott.

1:22:13
Please be seated.
1:22:19
Forgive me, Miss Debenham,
I must be brief.

1:22:21
You met Colonel Arbuthnott and fell
in love with each other in Baghdad.

1:22:24
Why must the English conceal
even their most impeccable emotions?

1:22:28
To answer your observations
in order,

1:22:30
of course, yes, yes,
1:22:34
and I don't know.
1:22:36
Then let me tell you what you do know,
that on the Bosporus Ferryboat

1:22:39
I overheard a part of your conversation
with the colonel.

1:22:42
Not now, not now. When it's all over.
When it's behind us, then.

1:22:47
When what was all over,
Miss Debenham?

1:22:51
And when what was behind you?
1:22:53
Was it some task
that had to be performed?

1:22:58
Some ordeal that
had to be endured?


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