

Episode 7
Season 6 Episode 7 | 53m 5sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
Leonard asks Will and Geordie for help when someone he knows is accused of murder.
Leonard goes to Will and Geordie to ask for their help when someone he knows is suddenly accused of murder.
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Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Funding for MASTERPIECE is provided by Viking and Raymond James with additional support from public television viewers and contributors to The MASTERPIECE Trust, created to help ensure the series’ future.

Episode 7
Season 6 Episode 7 | 53m 5sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
Leonard goes to Will and Geordie to ask for their help when someone he knows is suddenly accused of murder.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADProblems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipGEORDIE: Have you been to see him yet?
Not till I can bring him some good news.
♪ ♪ Mr. Davenport, he's setting a good example, I hope?
HENRY: He said she's his stepsister.
She didn't seem very sisterly to me.
This is Johnny-- we served together in the war.
Dad never talks about it.
There's a reason people don't talk about it.
Your friend's in prison and you can't even see him!
WILL: Sorry I didn't come sooner.
Would you pray with me?
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (thunder claps) (whimpers) (click) ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (men shouting indistinctly) DANIEL: Dear Leonard, I woke up this morning, and for a brief moment forgot you weren't there.
(birds squawking) Then it all came flooding back.
♪ ♪ (grunting and gasping) I was prepared to miss you.
Just not this much.
♪ ♪ Time stands still.
Everything's hollow.
♪ ♪ I long to hear from you.
(grunts) ♪ ♪ Will you write just once?
I can't rest until I know how you are.
♪ ♪ I wish we could swap places.
It should be me in there.
Your friend, D. ♪ ♪ LEONARD: "If we say that we have not sinned, "then we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us."
And God's word is not in us, hmm.
What do you make of it?
We must face our sins or there'll be no room in our hearts for God.
Very well put.
The thing is, I... ...think I started to believe that what I was doing, that it wasn't really a sin.
If we don't address our sins, then they only fester.
And we can't hope to realize the life God wants for us.
(bell ringing) (door opens) I'm truly grateful for your time, Chaplain.
Oh, and I for yours.
Usually, inmates only come here to steal the communion wine.
Bring your sins into the light, Mr. Finch.
Into the light.
(people talking in background) A pint of your finest, please, Tina.
Evening, officer.
One pint, then I'm off home.
Absolutely, one pint.
TINA: I'll bring them over.
Thanks.
Thank you.
♪ Do you walk and stroll with Susie Q ♪ ♪ And do that crazy hand jive, too ♪ (last call bell clanging) ♪ Papa told Willie, You'll ruin my home ♪ ♪ You and that hand jive has got to go ♪ Out-- I said out!
♪ Willie said, Papa, don't put me down ♪ Oh, come on!
♪ Hand jive ♪ ♪ Hand jive ♪ ♪ Doing that crazy hand jive ♪ (song fading) (clears throat) (grunts) Know what day it is?
Huh?
It's Tuesday.
Year's 1958 and the monarch is Queen Liz.
(yawning): Nothing wrong with these brain cells.
Only 'cause they're pickled.
Out with Johnny, were you?
Uh, no, Will.
May I?
My mother always says there's no greater disappointment in life than having to eat alone.
Though I suspect she was talking about filet mignon at the Ritz rather than... whatever this is.
Elroy.
Leonard.
Oh...
The homosexual curate.
Did they catch you in flagrante?
No.
I was in a club.
Police raided it.
They were decent enough to wait until I found my apparel before they arrested me.
Don't worry.
Practically everyone in here's a fairy, didn't you realize?
Even if they weren't before, they likely will be by the time they leave.
For every pansy who walks in, two walk out.
It's a veritable breeding ground in here.
Interesting sartorial choice.
Dining unshod.
I misplaced my shoes.
Joe stole them.
No, he's not a bad chap beneath it all.
You are joking.
Are you eating that?
No.
This is a statement of intent.
Our mission, if you will.
Mission?
Sounds daunting.
I've divided it into six categories: Worship.
Service to community.
Parish organization-- parentheses upkeep.
Discipleship?
Discipleship, civic duty, and maintaining a worshipful life.
You've just rewritten the Bible, Henry.
Don't you ever stop?
Read a book, watch television?
It's your television.
It's yours, too.
Mi casa es su casa.
Technically, su casa is the church's casa.
It's your home, too.
And I want you to feel happy there.
And relaxed.
Some of the time, at least.
She's back.
And she's cooking eggs in my kitchen.
Hello, Billy.
Hello, handsome chap.
Over easy or sunny side up?
(murmuring) Does anyone ever call you Billy?
I think it rather suits you.
You can't keep doing this.
Cooking breakfast?
Turning up unannounced.
I'm here to seek counsel.
From my vicar.
I'm not your vicar.
From my brother, then.
I'm not your brother.
The thing is, I've got myself in a bit of a bind.
Darling Amelia has chucked me out.
What did you do?
Oh, of course, it must be something that I've done.
I'm homeless.
Destitute.
(scoffs): Come on.
Doesn't the church have an obligation to protect me?
No.
Esmeralda claimed sanctuary in Notre Dame and the hunchback simply had to help her.
(men shouting) DANIEL (slurring): Come on, say that again!
Hey, Daniel, Daniel, calm down.
Get off me!
Bloody nutcase.
Get outta here!
What did he say?
It's always blackmail.
Easy pickings from the village pansy.
Daniel... DANIEL: Everyone knows, don't you?
You all know, don't you?!
WILL: Daniel... Go home.
Why won't he write to me?
♪ ♪ (car door closes) (birds squawking) Here to save souls, Vicar?
To visit a friend.
Poor man, I swear he ages with every visit.
(door opens) I'm lucky my son went to public school.
All this is a remarkably familiar experience.
GUARD: Come inside.
ARTHUR: Hi, son.
(sighing): Sit down, Dad.
(Sophie chuckling) Oh, have you lost weight?
Ought to market it to your pals.
The incarceration diet.
(people talking in background) You look well.
Geordie sends his regards.
Mrs. C, Jack.
How's the new curate?
Well, he's not you.
Be kind to him.
It's terrifying when you're new.
I, uh, I saw Daniel.
Why won't you write to him?
I have to take this time to reflect.
On my situation-- my failings.
Your failings?
What failings?
You don't deserve to be in here.
Don't you dare start thinking that.
But I am here, Will.
And if I'm going to survive this... (Elroy pounds table, shouts) Elroy, sit down!
GUARD: There you go.
SOPHIA: Please!
GUARD: Calm down now.
ELROY: No... GUARD: Come on.
♪ ♪ (birds twittering) GEORDIE: Will's here.
Happy anniversary.
You forgot.
CATHY: He forgot.
Happy anniversary.
Oh, you shouldn't have.
I will, uh, leave you to it.
Well, may as well have a pint.
You know, while you're here.
You don't mind, do you, love?
Marriage is a form of slavery.
Hardly worth celebrating anyway.
And you're in my bad books, too.
Don't send him home rolling drunk tonight.
It's like Leonard's just given up.
Like the spirit's gone out of him.
Incarceration will do that to a man.
All you have is endless fear and endless time to dwell on it.
How did you cope?
Hm?
In Burma, as a P.O.W.
Ah, you find a way.
Perhaps you could speak to Leonard.
Advise him.
The last thing he wants is me boring him with war stories.
Well, you have some kind of understanding of what he's going through... No.
(softly): No.
Another?
You're buying.
(glasses clinking) (keys jangling) (Joe's breath trembling, door closes) (keys jangling, lock turns) You're soaking.
Joe?
(bell ringing, Joe crying softly) (bell continues) LEONARD: Elroy.
Get help!
Get the governor!
Get Milton now!
I didn't do it.
(bell continues) They'll say it was me, but I didn't do it.
(door opens) No, it wasn't me!
It wasn't me!
GUARD: Come here.
(Joe struggling) It wasn't me!
(bell continues) ♪ ♪ MILTON: If you have information on the demise of Mr. Hastings, as your governor, I ask that you report it to myself.
Myself only.
Speculation and rumor will not be tolerated, nor will any kind of unrest.
We have our man.
He will be dealt with as I see fit.
Back to their cells.
GUARD: You heard the governor, back inside.
Mr. Milton.
GUARD: Come on, there you go.
Sir.
Joe protested his innocence.
I believe him.
You hear that, Reverend?
The degenerate believes the murderer.
You said come to you.
With information.
Not maudlin theories concocted by a pervert.
BYATT: Elroy was found in the bath, face down, fully clothed.
Do you know why Joe's here?
Killed his own mother.
Drowned her in the bath.
Face down, fully clothed.
All we can do now is pray.
(birds twittering) Tamara is truly sorry, and she'll do whatever it takes to make amends.
AMELIA (on phone): Oh, God.
Tell me you haven't got yourself entangled with her.
WILL (scoffing): I can't believe you'd even think that.
Tamara, Mum's on the phone-- can you speak to her?
I would, but I simply don't want to.
AMELIA: My advice, run-- run like the wind before she drags you into her vortex of unrelenting chaos.
Now, I must go, darling.
Much love.
(sighs) Your Freudian nightmare of a sibling is disrobing in the parlor.
Men!
Useless, the lot of them.
Now, we don't have the monopoly on uselessness.
Look, how about I throw you an anniversary party?
We could all do with some cheering up.
We'll make it a surprise, shall we?
Well, Geordie can't forget if he doesn't know about it.
Men!
Oh, here.
Read this.
It'll change your life.
"The Second... (quietly): Sex."
You can say it out loud.
MRS. CHAPMAN: Simon de Beaver.
Is it a sequel?
I haven't read the first one.
(telephone ringing) WILL: No, don't you dare!
His holiness the Reverend Billy's residence-- sinner or saint?
(on phone): It's Leonard.
Leonard?
How are you?
Leonard?
Is it terribly grim?
WILL: Give it here!
(giggling) Leonard?
LEONARD: Will, I need your help.
LEONARD (quietly): Joe was telling the truth.
And he was scared.
(quietly): Of what?
I don't know.
I get the feeling the governor is trying to hush it up.
No police have been.
You can't go anywhere in this place without a guard.
So how did Joe kill a man and get back to his cell without anyone noticing?
You're quite the detective.
Ironic that it took me to become a criminal first.
You're not a criminal.
You see what you can find out.
From all my many friends and acquaintances?
What will you do?
Call in the cavalry.
♪ ♪ MILTON: Joseph Davies killed his own mother.
Nasty little bastard.
Now he kills Elroy Hastings?
He confessed to it.
Heard it with my own ears.
Like I say, he's a nasty little... Yeah, we get the picture, Mr. Milton.
Were the two men at odds?
No more than most.
But you put a group of deviants in an enclosed space, something like this is bound to happen eventually.
(exhaling): May we see Joe?
He's in confinement.
(key jangling, lock turning) (door opens, Joe cries out) MILTON: You tell these men the God's honest truth now.
Just as you told me.
(whimpers) WILL: Joe?
I'm a friend of Leonard's.
(groans) Uh, give him some space, Will.
(Joe whimpering, panting) Lose all sense of yourself in a place like this.
No up, no down.
No near, no far, hm?
I don't like the dark.
Well, you tell us what happened, Joe, and I'll get you out of here.
No more darkness.
I didn't do it.
(exhales) (quietly): I didn't kill anyone.
I didn't kill anyone.
WILL: What do you mean?
Joe?
You spinning lies?
(stammering): Please... Well, I can see how you got your confession, Mr. Milton.
You beat him yourself, or did you get someone else to do your dirty work?
My men will see you out.
(door creaks) (sobbing) No, you can't leave me!
No!
Don't leave me!
(screaming) Keep a fella in there long enough, they always lose their mind.
(gate opens) (bird squawking) That bastard was enjoying it.
He was enjoying Joe's suffering.
They can't keep him in there, can they?
It's barbaric.
Well, barbarism's the whole point, Will.
He was telling the truth, don't you think?
He might say anything to get out of that place.
What if he's innocent?
What if he doesn't belong in there at all?
Maybe we should speak to his father.
Ten minutes.
(door closes) ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ We're just trying to piece together a few things, Mr. Davies.
About the night your wife died.
(stammering): I don't remember much.
They said, they said I had a...
They said I had a breakdown, a... What I saw...
I about lost me mind.
The doctor, he made me...
He made me have electric shock therapy, but the memories, they, they started to come back.
What did you see?
(weeping): I saw my son.
(weeping) He's holding my Izzie under water.
Izzie... She wasn't moving.
(voiceover): He was never a violent boy.
So you saw what he did.
You saw Joe kill your wife.
(breath shudders): I... (weeping): I try so hard to forget.
I wish... (swallows, sniffles) I wish I could forget.
♪ ♪ (people talking in background) (gate opens) Ah.
"Veritas."
Truth.
Mm.
LEONARD: What do you think these mean?
I don't know, phases of the moon, perhaps.
Sorry to break your reverie-- you have a visitor.
My son talked of you fondly.
I have no one else to turn to, Mr. Finch.
I don't see what help I can be.
They told me Elroy died because he was a homosexual.
Rather like it was the punishment he deserved.
You think he deserved it, too.
No.
No, I just...
I forget.
Not all of you are like Elroy.
And how's that?
At peace.
Certain you don't belong here.
Elroy told me something in confidence.
Information about this place.
I really don't see how I can assist.
Go to the vicarage at Grantchester.
Ask for Will Davenport.
He'll help you all he can.
You don't deserve to be punished.
(birds twittering) WILL: It must be difficult, a woman of your standing with a son in prison.
You think I'm ashamed of him!
I've known since Elroy was a little boy who he was.
Who he'd grow up to be.
I cherished him just the same.
It wasn't him I was ashamed of.
It was everyone else.
This bloody country.
Prudes and hypocrites, the lot of them.
I feel the same, Mrs. Hastings.
I really do.
Did Elroy ever mention an inmate, Joseph Davies?
Is he the one?
At least, that's what they'd want us to believe.
You think they'd lie?
I'm sure they would.
This information you have, is it what upset Elroy when you visited?
A man came to the house.
He was friendly at first.
They always are.
Then he stated his real purpose.
Blackmail?
I let him know in no uncertain terms to bugger off.
(inhales) Elroy was furious.
And what would happen if this man didn't get his money?
He knew people in prison, he said.
He would make sure Elroy suffered.
I should've just damn well paid him.
♪ ♪ That man you had a fight with, he was trying to blackmail you.
They all want money.
And if you didn't pay?
He knew someone in prison, he said.
Make sure Leonard'd suffer.
It was lies.
It's always lies.
Night, Jonesie.
Night.
Have a pint for me.
(lock turning) (door opens, closes) I met your fella yesterday.
He had a message for you.
(gasps) (retching) Wouldn't pay a measly fiver to make sure that you don't get hurt.
He's washed his hands of you.
(gasping) All that shame you heaped on him, all that suffering-- can you really blame him?
You brought this on yourself, you know that, don't you?
(softly): Yes.
(sniffs) Stand up.
(door opens) WILL: Leonard?
You okay?
LEONARD: I thought he was going to kill me.
♪ ♪ (panting) GEORDIE: So how many inmates have you threatened?
I... utilize them.
Just to make a few quid?
They get what they deserve and I get to feed my family.
Leonard deserved to be beaten?
(chuckles): Prisons are there to punish.
WILL: Prisons are.
You aren't.
Most people would agree with what I do, you know that?
You do-gooders.
Wringing your hands.
Did you threaten Elroy's mother?
(inhales): Pansy families are easy money.
Nobody wants that secret coming out.
But she refused to pay.
And she told her son what you'd done.
It needs a guard with a key to get to the bathroom.
And you were on duty the night Elroy died.
Did you beat him?
No.
Did you drown him, Mr. Lynch?
He was alive when I left him.
If I let Joe Davies out and another inmate dies... (keys jangling) ...that's on your head.
WILL: Joe?
Joe... (shivering) Geordie!
Help me get him up.
I think you meant it.
You didn't kill your mother, did you?
(muffled): Geordie... (clearly): Geordie, please.
(whimpering) GEORDIE (grunts): Okay.
We have Lynch in custody.
We'll charge him with Elroy's murder.
If you have anything to say, Joe, now's the time.
♪ ♪ He had no right to hurt you, Leonard.
Do not let this place destroy you.
Because if you do, you'll be living this sentence for the rest of your life.
You're only a prisoner when you lose hope.
WILL: Joe Davies was just a child, with no history of violence-- it just doesn't add up.
20th of October, 1950, ordinary Friday.
Joe's coming home from school.
It's bath night.
His mother fills the tub, and then he kills her.
Nothing provoked it, there was, there was no argument.
He didn't say a word.
He confessed.
Confessions can be coerced.
Will you stop pushing?
Are you all right?
I'm fine.
7.30 at the vicarage, remember.
I remember.
GEORDIE: I thought about Burma today.
Do you ever think about it, Johnny?
No.
Huh.
(softly): Yeah.
First year home, um...
I thought about it every waking moment.
Didn't even have to close my eyes, and I was back there.
The dark.
The smell.
The walls closing in.
♪ ♪ I got to a point where I'd rather drive my car into a tree than think about it anymore.
Swerved at the last moment.
And I was sitting there in my wreck of a motor, and I realized that... That I needed to stop remembering.
(clicks tongue) I was reading that.
You're helping with the paper chains.
WILL: Well, since you asked so nicely.
It's this book she's reading-- she's become very bossy.
You say bossy, I say in charge of my own womanhood.
Bossy, just incredibly bossy.
Apologies.
What for?
It's your study.
Well, it's your study, too.
You'll be joining us this evening, won't you?
I'd really rather not impose.
Henry...
I want to work!
Very happy to work.
Well, service to the community, uh, civic duty.
At a push, we could call it discipleship.
There's certainly one person who could do with some guidance.
I refuse to be outnumbered by married folk at this thing.
I'm engaged, as it happens.
Hm, so nothing contractual, then.
You're not invited.
Henry's invited.
Henry lives here, you don't.
So, Hen... Can I call you Hen?
I'd really rather you didn't.
(kids laughing) Let's you and me get blotto, Hen.
♪ And it's rolling into New Orleans ♪ Will!
♪ Express yourself back home ♪ ♪ 'Cause there ain't big love alone ♪ We got a gatecrasher.
(laughs): Don't worry.
The more, the merrier.
I promise, I am exceedingly merry.
(chuckles): Is she tipsy?
Always.
(laughs) You look wonderful.
Aw, bless you.
Geordie had better get here quick, mind.
This corset's liable to do me a mischief!
(Will laughs) The corset is the imprisonment of the feminine.
JACK: Oh, she's off again.
(chuckles, gasps): Oh, do you like it?
It's photos of us throughout the years.
I made the cover from my wedding dress.
Oh, it was just moldering in the attic.
It's silly, really, but...
He'll love it.
GEORDIE (voiceover): It was meeting Cathy, that's when it all changed.
Ah, she's quite a girl.
Hm.
That woman.
(chuckles) That amazing woman.
I envy what you have.
Do you ever remember their names?
The other fellas in the camp?
Uh, no.
I, sometimes, I catch a glimpse of their faces.
Wade.
Was it Jackie Wade, was it?
Little fella.
Beat the hell out of him, but it was dysentery that got him in the end.
(exhales) GUARD: Lights out!
(doors clanging) (Joe whimpering, murmuring) Joe?
(Joe's breath hissing) (gasping) It's all right.
You're here, I'm right here, see?
I'll stay awake until you go to sleep, how about that?
(panting) Lynch wasn't the one, he didn't kill Elroy.
Well, who did?
You can tell me.
(yelling): And who will you tell?
They don't want to hear the truth!
No one ever does!
(banging): Turn the lights back on!
(guard yelling in distance) (voice fades): Turn the lights back on... Joe... (yelping frantically) (guards calling in distance) (banging): I need to speak to the chaplain!
(banging) GEORDIE (cackling drunkenly): Hey, hey, hey!
There he is.
(kisses) Are you drunk?
Just a tiny, tiny bit.
(softly): Oh, God.
Remember, it's a surprise.
Shh, shh, shh... (shushing) I won't tell a soul.
(people talking in background) Surprise!
(chuckling) ALL (tepidly): Happy anniversary!
(tentative applause) Ah, you lovely lot.
(laughing) Oh, eh... And Cathy?
She's over there.
GEORDIE: Ah... How many have you had?
Just a... A toast!
To Cathy!
I met her at a railway station.
Now you're just as beautiful now as you were back then, and... She saved me.
She doesn't know it, but she did.
She saved me.
You did, my darling.
Yeah, I met her at a railway station.
You've already said that, Geordie.
Hm?
WILL: To Cathy!
OTHERS (tentatively): To Cathy.
(drink spills) (applauding tentatively) BYATT: How can I help you, Leonard?
If an innocent man were in this prison, how would one go about setting him free?
I take it this isn't a theoretical question.
(sighs): Joe wants you to believe he's not guilty.
You want to believe it, too, because you'd rather not face up to sin.
Those who can't confront sin can't hope to be saved.
(intently): This is not about sin, this is about a young man's liberty.
Are you raising your voice to me?
Sorry.
♪ ♪ I can count on your help with communion tomorrow, I take it?
LEONARD: Of course.
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (gasps) (whispers): 5-6-9 4-2.
"Veritas."
(music playing) Geordie, Geordie, maybe have some water.
I don't want water.
You can barely stand up as it is.
Oh, nag, nag-- nag, nag, nag, nag.
See the problem with you is, you think you know everything.
But you don't know anything.
All right, Geordie... You don't... Cathy did all of this for you.
Now try showing some appreciation.
Dance with me, Billy!
Go home.
(chuckles): Georgie, I demand you spin me.
(both giggling) Whoo!
(laughing) (glass shattering, Tamara laughing) Inside, now.
Whoops!
I'm in trouble.
(giggles): Naughty Georgie.
WILL (quietly): I'm sending you home.
Is Daddy sick?
Daddy's fine, don't worry.
Cathy, wait.
I'll get me coat.
Don't ever do that again.
Not in front of them.
(grunts) ♪ ♪ BYATT: Draw near with faith and take this Holy Sacrament to your comfort, and make your humble confession to Almighty God, meekly kneeling upon your knees.
ALL: Almighty God, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, maker of all things, judge of all men, we acknowledge and bewail our manifold sins and wickedness.
(snoring) (exhales) (footsteps descending) You've not had the best impression of us, have you?
Since Leonard's departure, things have been a little off-kilter.
I've not been good enough, and I'm sorry.
I just, um...
I miss him.
I miss Leonard.
I miss my family, too.
Very much.
Well, I know it's not quite the same, but we could be your family.
If you're willing to accept us.
Please tell me that doesn't make Tamara my sister.
(chuckles) Well, I thought that was pretty successful.
Hm.
(sighs) (sighs): Do you think she'll ever forgive me?
If you're lucky.
You know, if you ever want to confide in someone, it's sort of what I do for a living.
I'm fine, Will.
Ah, I know, you're always fine.
At least you say you are, even when it's bloody obvious you're not.
(sighs) It was Esme that got me.
It wasn't that she was angry, it...
It was that she was so responsible, comforting the kids and, and her mum.
She shouldn't have to do that.
She shouldn't have to feel responsible.
But when it comes to their parents, children always do.
♪ ♪ (door shuts) Five... Six... Nine... Four... Two.
(safe unlocks) "Joseph Davies.
"Matricide by drowning, father Arthur Davies.
Unemployed, unlikely to provide."
"Leonard Finch.
Homosexual, Daniel Marlowe, photographer, may provide."
"Elroy Hastings, homosexual, mother Sophie.
Could yield plenty."
Lynch was the muscle.
Did your dirty work.
Did you split the money?
(chuckles) Elroy realized it was you behind it all.
You killed him.
(shouts in pain) Guard!
That man just struck me!
I didn't, I didn't!
Take him to solitary!
I didn't, I didn't hit him!
I didn't!
Did she have a wedding ring?
Your wife?
Yes.
But not here.
Why would she take it off?
My wife wouldn't part with hers for love nor money.
Was she leaving you, Arthur?
I don't know.
You pushed her in the water.
You held her down.
Arthur, you remember.
I don't want to.
But you have to.
For Joe, you owe him this.
ARTHUR: I don't want to think of it.
All right, Will... You held her there, you watched her die.
(crying) And you let Joe take the blame.
(whimpers) (yells, sobbing): God!
Why did I do it?
(sobbing) ♪ ♪ (lighter clicks) (inhales, exhales) (door opens) Joe wasn't responsible for his mother's death.
That's conclusive, is it?
GEORDIE: He wasn't responsible for Elroy's, either.
I must say, I'm surprised.
What, Joe drowns his mother, therefore he must've drowned Elroy?
The killings were identical.
WILL: Only Joe didn't drown his mother.
Which means Elroy's death was a set-up.
Something to get Joe framed.
WILL: And it had to be done by someone who knew every single detail of the lie Joe told.
Someone he confessed to.
♪ ♪ I am a man of God.
GEORDIE: A man of God, or playing God?
WILL: To everyone, it seemed like Milton was weak.
That he turned a blind eye to the rot in this place.
(voiceover): But you were the rot, Chaplain.
And Elroy was going to tell everyone what kind of outfit you run here.
(water running) And you couldn't let that happen.
(grunts) WILL: And now you had to find someone to blame.
(muffled): No, no!
(crying) ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (footsteps approaching, keys jangling) (lock turns, door opens) GUARD: Up you get, Finch.
(door closes) I'll buy you a new album, how about that?
(sighs) I'll buy you a new camera if that's what it takes.
You were with Johnny, weren't you?
I don't like him, Geordie.
No.
I do like him.
I just don't like who he turns you into.
Do we have to do this now?
So angry.
Been reading that book again?
(sighs): Let's talk in the morning.
Well, let's do it.
Well, go on, off you go.
What do you want to talk about?
Do you wanna talk about the marriage?
Do you wanna talk about the kids, what?
Well, what do you talk about with Johnny?
Oh, you want me to go over that, do you, eh?
The prison camp, you want to dig up that?
And make me wade through it?
You want to make me remember so you can feel good, is that it?
I can't remember the last time I felt good.
Come on.
(yells): Come on!
Every time you mess up, you expect me to forgive you.
Hm?
You, you get drunk, you embarrass me, I forgive you.
You have an affair, I forgive you.
We're back to that, are we?
Yes, we are back to that!
It doesn't just stop because you want it to.
I'll go, then, shall I?
Is that what you want?
(exhales): I hate it when you're like this.
Don't walk away from me.
Don't walk away from me!
Go on, then!
(exhales) My dad won't survive this.
If I can, he will.
It was a brave thing you did, but you must live your life now.
He, uh, sounds like a good fella, this D. (clears throat) (footsteps receding) LEONARD (voiceover): All of us are flawed.
We all make mistakes.
We here know that better than anyone.
Others may forgive us our foibles.
Forgiving ourselves is ever so much harder.
If we can't absolve ourselves, what kind of life does that leave us?
One mired in pain.
In self-loathing.
If God can forgive us our trespasses, we must, too.
♪ ♪ Forgive yourself, and let Him cleanse you from your pain.
♪ ♪ (gasping) (click) MAN: It was an accident.
WOMAN: Madame asked me to give you this.
Johnny's business card.
She wants to leave him, but she's scared.
At least when we were prisoners, we had each other.
Did something happen?
Just a lovers' tiff.
WILL: That's what my mother used to say.
You don't ever raise your hand to Cathy!
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♪ ♪
Video has Closed Captions
Leonard asks Will and Geordie for help when someone he knows is accused of murder. (30s)
Video has Closed Captions
Henry runs some ideas by Will. Meanwhile, an uninvited guest shows up at the vicarage. (1m 9s)
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