1:03:00
She, uh, she never gave
a person a minute's peace.
1:03:04
- Tea, right?
- Um, actually, no, l'm late.
1:03:08
Would you tell Mr Greenhill
l'll meet him at court? Thank you.
1:03:29
Well, this is a surprise.
1:03:36
Great, we'll split a cab.
1:03:38
- Don't you need to change?
- Don't l look all right?
1:03:42
Excuse me.
1:03:52
The way you were looking at me,
l thought there was somethin' wrong.
1:03:54
A little 5:00 shadow, perhaps, but...
1:03:57
nothing that would turn the jury
against me, do you think?
1:04:08
You know, for the life of me, l can't
figure out who sent that damn thing.
1:04:12
- What?
- The letter, Jennifer.
1:04:16
l mean, they say it was sent
on the same day that Rita died.
1:04:19
But Rita never left
the apartment that day.
1:04:22
And the mail chute upstairs has been
out of use since the renovations began.
1:04:26
Well, you certainly wouldn't
mail any letter to the State's
Attorney's Office yourself.
1:04:30
Of course not.
1:04:32
Suppose the greedy nephew, uh,
sent it or one of the cousins.
1:04:36
They certainly know
what her signature looks like.
They've seen it on enough cheques.
1:04:42
Could l see a photostat
of the envelope?