:21:00
Did he leave a note?
:21:02
None that we know of, sir.
:21:04
Then how do you know it was suicide?
:21:07
There's no other explanation.
:21:09
He knew what he was doing,
that's for sure.
:21:11
You can't fall into an airlock
and then an elevator.
:21:15
You have to open hatches,
press buttons, close hatches.
:21:18
It's the only explanation.
:21:23
Thank you.
:21:28
Okay. Fanning.
:21:30
-What about the pump station?
-Just a fight.
:21:32
We took them both in to cool off.
They straightened out soon.
:21:36
-Gil?
-Pretty quiet.
:21:38
Couple of calls about noise.
Nothing much.
:21:44
Who ordered all these pressure packs?
This is a mine, not a war.
:21:48
-You did, doctor.
-I said 1 00. Not 1 ,000.
:21:52
I said 1 00, which can't be mistaken
for anything except 1 00.
:21:56
It doesn't sound remotely
Iike 1 ,000. Listen!
:21:59
You'll hear what I mean.
One thousand.
:22:02
One hundred.
:22:04
Totally different.
:22:06
You think they sound the same?
Who are you, anyway?
:22:09
Are you Dr. Lazarus?
:22:10
Two aspirins and call me in the morning.
Doctor joke. Are you the new marshal?
:22:14
Yes. I'd like to talk to you.
:22:16
I got an alibi. Four people will swear
we were playing poker.
:22:20
I never heard that one before.
:22:21
-That's really funny.
-Sorry.
:22:24
Yesterday, a man went into the
atmosphere without his pressure suit.
:22:29
A couple of days before, another
man cut his suit open on purpose.
:22:33
It happens here.
:22:35
How often?
:22:36
-I don't know. It just happens here.
-Why?
:22:39
I'm not a psychiatrist.
I can't tell you why.
:22:42
Some people can't take it
here after awhile.
:22:44
-Did you do autopsies?
-No.
:22:46
Why not?
:22:47
The Company wanted the bodies
shipped out quickly.
:22:50
Secondly, when one exposes
himself to zero-pressure atmosphere. . .
:22:54
. . .there isn't a lot to inspect.
:22:56
In the third place,
you're becoming a nuisance.
:22:59
Yes, I know.