It
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:45:03
No, no, no, Mike.
No, no, no.

:45:05
I will have no need of this stuff.
Thanks for thinking of me...

:45:10
...and including it just in case,
but none for me! Thank you!

:45:14
- Richie, you're shouting.
- I know.

:45:16
Beep, beep, Richie. Beep, beep.
:45:19
Talk to us, Mike. Tell us stories.
:45:21
Tell us things so we don't have to
remember what we saw in the library.

:45:27
Hey, Eddie. Come on, pal.
:45:29
Don't let it get you. Fight it.
:45:33
I saw myself. I saw myself back there.
:45:37
I know it's just camphor water,
but I need it anyway.

:45:40
Take it easy, pal.
:45:42
If it works, it's good.
You've believed in it...

:45:46
...and that's all that ever mattered.
- Thanks.

:45:49
You all remember what was going on
in Derry 30 years ago.

:45:53
There were killings, maimings,
disappearances. Mostly children.

:45:58
Everybody was afraid
but nobody did anything.

:46:01
Until we went after It.
:46:07
We almost killed It.
:46:10
Bowers confessed and the killings
stopped. Until now, 30 years later.

:46:16
If you count backwards by 30...
:46:19
...every date corresponds to a disaster
in Derry's history.

:46:24
1960: the fire at the Black Spot Club.
:46:26
1930: the explosion
at the old ironworks.

:46:29
1900: the massacre at Drake's Creek.
And on, and on.

:46:33
The biggest mystery is how 253
settlers disappeared without a trace.

:46:39
Thank you for that illuminating,
if somewhat morbid history.

:46:45
She didn't want to know.
:46:47
You knew all about this. Even then.
:46:49
- Miss Douglas didn't want to know.
- It's a disease, Bev.

:46:53
None of them wants to know.
:46:55
- It's too horrible. They act...
- Like it didn't happen.

:46:59
I remember a man, Mr. Ross.

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