"You get prettier every day." "Tell me about the beauty contest you won." "Find a place to eat?" "I was unlucky." "I did." "Where?" "If I wasn't a good friend of yours, I'd tell ya." "How's our boy?" "Playing it cool." "How's it, Steve?" "Eh." "Nice white walls to mark the days off on." "Maybe I'll draw pictures of guys with funny faces." "Let's say your face." "You'll be outside soon." "You can forget about going back to a cell when this thing is over." "That is, if everything works out all right." "How would you like to have your lid opened?" "I brought you some smokes." "Cops always give me something I can't use." "I don't have a match." "What did you want me to bring you— a sack of jelly beans?" "Good luck, Steve." "Where's the martini I ordered?" "I'm to prepare you for surgery." "I'm on a holiday till Monday." "Take your toys and get outta here." "There's been a change in plans." "Dr. Marston's operating tonight." "I said Monday." "I was born on a Monday." "I might as well go on one, like dirty laundry." "Miss Millikan, on the Rawley case, do you know of any changes in plans?" "I see." "All right, thank you." "Surgery's still scheduled for 8:00, Mr. Rawley." "Tell 'em not to break up their card game for me." "I only work here." "Yeah, well, you're not gonna work on me till Monday." "This sedative will relax you completely." "Stab yourself with it." "I said no!" "You're making this difficult, Mr. Rawley." "When I say no, that means get outta here!" "Flannigan." "You got trouble?" "Yeah." "He decided to postpone his operation." "Bad decision." "We don't upset the doc's schedule." "You shouldn't have done that." "You can get the banana cart." "We'll have him ready for surgery." "Bend your knees, please." "Hey, Doc." "Yes?" "I never saw how I came into this world." "I'd like to see how I go out." "What do you mean?" "Give me a mirror." "Let me watch." "You won't see it for long." "I said I'd like to see it." "Bring him a mirror." "Scalpel." "Sponge count correct, Doctor." "Instrument count correct." "Fine job, Dr. Marston." "Fine." "Thanks." "You might have made a little history tonight." "I hope so." "What kind of a night did he have?" "He was awake only once." "Complain about pain?" "No, sir." "Continue with the same medication." "A Mr. Jawald to see you, Doctor." "Jawald?" "Who's he?" "He wants to talk with you about Steve Rawley." "Send him in." "Dr. Marston?" "Have a seat." "I came about Steve Rawley, Doctor." "How soon can he have visitors?" "Oh, not for some time." "Insurance investigator, huh?" "That's right." "People hock fur coats they haven't paid for, burn up businesses that are on the rocks, you know." "I thought we'd kept this fairly quiet." "How did you find out that Mr. Rawley was here?" "I know a policeman." "Well, what do you want to see him about?" "I heard you were making an honest man of him." "I thought I might get some honest answers for a change." "He's in no condition to talk to anyone." "He's just been through a very serious brain operation." "Yeah, I can imagine." "To make that guy honest, you'd have to cut off his head." "It's our theory that certain instincts— in this case, the criminal type— can be removed by surgery." "Whether we've been successful or not remains to be seen." "In any case, I doubt whether Rawley will ever be of much help to you." "What do you mean by that?" "If we were successful, he's lost his memory." "Then I'll refresh it for him." "There's a small matter of $130,000 he stole last Christmas Eve." "That payroll was insured by my company." "He can't be tried for that crime again." "And when he agreed to this operation, he was paroled in my custody." "Right now, Rawley doesn't even remember his own name." "He believes that his loss of memory is due to a traffic accident." "It's important that nothing disturbs him... and that no one brings up his past." "I don't think my company will see eye to eye with you on that." "Good day, Mr. Jawald." "Okay." "But I've got a one-track mind... and 130,000 reasons to stay on that track." "What do you call this gadget, Doc?" "A polygraph." "Sounds like something that eats crackers." "It's commonly called a lie detector." "Oh." "You want me to lie to you, Doc?" "No." "It's just a routine test." "Well, get your contraption goin'." "What's your name?" "James Blake." "How old are you?" "Thirty-four." " How do you know you're 34?" " Miss Quist told me." "Where were you born?" "I don't remember." "Where did you live?" "I don't remember that either." "What kind of work did you do?" "By the looks of these, I never did a day's work in my life." "Have you ever been in jail?" "No, but I kissed a girl once." "You don't need your machine for that." "Check with Miss Quist." "Any more questions, Doc?" "Just one." "Does $130,000 mean anything to you?" "Yeah." "That's a lot of money." "Morning, Blake." "Hi, Doc." "How do you like my work?" "Very professional job." "Ever do any gardening before?" "Not that I can remember." "Well, keep up the good work." "Oh, say, Doc." "I was curious about something." "Yes?" "Well, I'm in pretty good shape now." "I eat like a horse, feel as strong as one." "How long do I stick around?" "Not very much longer." "Oh?" "Well, what do I do when I leave?" "What would you like to do?" "Gee, I don't know." "Maybe I oughta stick around and do your gardening for you." "I don't know if I can do anything else." "I was kinda hoping that, later, I could help you out in the lab, but" "Well, that's daydreaming, I guess, huh?" "Without dreams, men would be pretty lost in this world." "You can stay here as long as you care to." "Thanks, Doc." "How much longer we have to watch him?" "What are you kickin' about?" "You're sittin' in the sun, aren't ya?" "Last month, you were pounding' the pavement." "Hey, good lookin'." "Some friends to see you." "Hey." "Hey!" "Blake's getting away." "What's this all about?" "Are you kiddin', Steve?" "Steve?" "My name's James Blake." "Well, what do you know?" "You grabbed the wrong guy." "We also picked up a tail, in case you guys are interested." "Look, this is no time to back the car in." "The law's behind us." "Come on, step on it!" "Hey, enough's enough." "What's this all about?" "We'll tell ya." "Big Band, Sentimental ]" "Steve!" "Well, somebody's gonna be awfully embarrassed." "You haven't changed, Steve." "I don't know who you guys think I am, but it's a cinch you got your wires crossed." "Steve, is this a gag?" "You know something, I think he's playin' it straight." "Yeah." "Tried to be funny in the car." "Had me in stitches." "A real comic talent." "Look, why don't you call Dr. Marston at the clinic?" "He'll tell you who I am." "Steve, are you joking?" "It's Peg." "For you two, isn't this a little late for introductions?" "Ah, maybe he's off his rocker." "Yeah, he's a nut." "A rich nut." "He can't remember anything, but he will." "When I get through with him, he'll be able to count from one to 130,000." "We had to take the silent treatment from you when you were in stir, but you're not in stir now." "So start remembering your old friends... and tell us where you hid that dough." "Steve, we all took the same chances, right?" "I ask you, isn't it fair we all have the same cut?" "What cut?" "What chances?" "I never saw you guys before in my life." "Get outta my way!" "No!" "Lefty!" "Beat it!" "Buy yourself a mink coat." "Grab his arms." "Okay." "Come on, Arnie." "Come on, Steve." "Don't make it tough on yourself." "Just tell us where the money is, and we'll all be friends again." "There never was a time I couldn't have taken you apart." "You fancied it up with talk." "Well, for a year now, I've been doin' the talkin'." "And it's worked out pretty good." "And now for your afternoon edition of the news." "Police authorities are investigating the disappearance of Steven Rawley, now going under the alias of James Blake." "Transferred from state prison to the Marston Clinic for some undisclosed treatment," "Rawley made his escape today after a running gun battle through the city." "Rawley- or Blake, as he now calls himself- was serving a 10-year term for armed robbery." "A general alarm has been broadcast, roadblocks set up." "And police warn that he is probably armed... and in the company of three unidentified men." "Officers have been cautioned that this man is dangerous." "They're crazy." "Also dangerous is the fire that swept through a furniture warehouse at" "You see, Steve?" "You're a very popular guy." "Everybody's trying to get you for a personal appearance." "Seems we were all having a little talk, weren't we?" "I've done all the talking I'm gonna do for now." "Don't make me dot the i's." "No, Lefty!" "Let me try." "Okay, try it your way." "Make him a man." "Come on, Steve." "Go on, Steve." "Get a little memory exercise." "Steve, you were great." "What do you mean?" "You're running them ragged." "They're making lots of threats, but, take it from me, they don't know what time it is." "Well, thanks for stepping in when you did." "He wasn't kidding with that cigar." "He really meant to use me for an ashtray." "Oh, Steve, you don't know what it's been like with Lefty." "First cursing about you, then chasing me around the furniture." "He didn't catch me though." "I guess, for that, he'd need a Cadillac, huh?" "You don't really believe that?" "I don't know what I believe." "This hasn't been the happiest day of my life exactly." "Day isn't over yet." "What'd they feed you at the hospital, jellied consommé?" "What do you want me to do— turn somersaults?" "Where are we?" "Oh, Steve, stop it." "Look, there isn't very much time." "You tell me where to find it." "In the meanwhile, you keep stalling them with that wonderful act of yours." "And I'll go out and buy the tickets for anywhere that you say, come back here, and we'll break away." "I got everything here." "I brought all your clothes over." "For the 10th time, listen." "If you want, I'll make a record of it." "I—" "They'll break in any second." "Where did you hide the money?" "What money?" "You really think I'm lying, don't you?" "He's all yours." "Get away from that window, Steve." "This calls for a $50 raise." "I'll sail forth." "I'm out." "What, no re-raise?" "I don't want to be greedy." "Besides, we're only playing for markers." "If I win too much, I may never see that dough." "With me, a gambling debt is a debt of honor." "For me, an I.O.U. is a piece of paper." "If you've got one and a dime, you can ride the streetcar." "Two." "Two, huh?" "Mm-hmm." "I will check." "Twenty-five." "Twenty-five, huh?" "Would a pair of aces impress you?" "No." "No." "If I had three of them, would it depress you?" "It would that." "How come you suddenly got so lucky?" "Eh, guess it's my day." "Give me them cards." "I want to count 'em." "What's the matter?" "Don't you guys trust me?" "We trust you?" "You don't even trust you." "We know you too well." "You always cheat." "How can I cheat in a three-handed game?" "It ain't easy." "You even cheat yourself in solitaire." "Aw, look, fellas—" "Get off the line." "Who's that with you, Bertha?" "Gladys, I think there's somebody cutting in." "You know, come to think of it, Arnie, I didn't see no ace of hearts." "We'll know in a minute." "Madam, please get off the line." "Well, I got a little news for you." "There's only 51 cards in this deck." "There's one missing." "I don't know if something's missing." "What is this— Russian dressing?" "Where?" "I— How did that get there?" "Now eat it." "Oh, now, Lefty" "Eat it!" "I want the police." "I'll never go to him—" "Come on, pick him up." "What were you gonna do, call the cops?" "How long do you think you can keep me here?" "Till you get smart." "And you weren't very smart picking up that phone." "You heard the radio." "The cops are lookin' all over for you." "And when they find you, they'll throw away the key." "I don't remember." "I don't remember anything." "Then we'll have to beat it out of you." "Now, you wouldn't want us to do that, would you, Steve?" "Can't you remember nothing at all?" "No." "Not even this?" "No." "Aw, you should, Steve, because it was a beautiful caper." "No small gas station job." "Take it from me, it was planned like a battle." "Believe me, Steve, no five-star general could've rigged it better." "Interested?" "Yeah." "Very." "Okay." "Listen closely so you don't miss any details." "I remember the job like we pull it this afternoon." "Yeah." "You figured it so there wouldn't be a slip-up." "There wasn't." "You picked Christmas Eve for the job... because this factory was going to distribute a big cash bonus to its workmen." "All right, I believe you, but I've heard enough." "That's funny." "We ain't heard enough." "Your silence is givin' me an earache." "We were all pretty upset, Steve." "Lefty kept taking chances going to see you, and you weren't very hospitable." "How's Peg?" "How's the dough doin'?" "I said, "How's Peg?"" "Why don't you find out for yourself?" "What'd you do with the money, Steve?" "I invested it in real estate." "Every lot has a view of Catalina." "Huh?" "All right." "I threw it down the sewer." "What is all this?" "I'm getting awful tired of your coming up here every month asking the same question." "If it wasn't for this wire, you'd be wearing my hands for a necktie." "Are you running the store now?" "We ain't gonna wait 10 years." "As long as I'm up here, consider the money's in escrow." "Incidentally, how's Peg?" "When we heard you'd been moved to the clinic, we decided we could take care of you better than they could." "Look, you've tried everything to make me remember." "I tell you nothing rings a bell." "Hey, Lefty." "Yeah?" "Remember the suit Steve had on when we pulled that job?" "Sure." "A dark-brown one." "Kind of nifty." "So, look here." "He's wearing a light one." "Yeah." "So he must have changed his clothes before he got pinched." "That means he went home." "So that's where you hid the dough." "Look, I tell you I— Don't tell us nothin'." "Let's go and get it." "Cookie, get the car." "Right." "You don't mind joining us, do you, pal?" "And if I said no?" "Big Band ] [ No Audible Dialogue ]" "Somebody pulled the plug." "Maybe I'd better get a hose." "Been reading the papers." "How's the stock market?" "Don't want to talk about him, huh?" "Why not?" "He something sacred, someone you put a monument up to?" "Let's get something straight, Freddie." "He's no good." "He was never any good." "Remember what he did to me the last night we were in here?" "Oh, it was just a lovers' quarrel." "Don't make me laugh." "He never loved me." "I was just something for him to hang presents on." "He gave you plenty of them." "That's a cinch." "Scalps, Freddie." "Just scalps." "Advertising." "He wanted to show off in front of a bunch of cheap hoodlums." "Give me another one." "Aw, Peg, take it easy, will you?" "I'm gonna have to carry you out of here." "Some Sir Galahad I wound up with." "Oh, Fred, what do you do when you hate yourself?" "I usually take it out on my wife." "Big help you are." "Yeah." "People always feel better when they talk to me." "That's why I ain't got television." "Well, looks like Steve didn't pay his rent." "Let's take a look inside anyway." "Okay." "Hey, Lefty, this is easier." "Hey, look out!" "A bird." "Well, come on." "Hey, what you got here?" "A piece of paper with the number 1133 on it, stuck on the bottom of that drawer with tape." "Means something to you, doesn't it, Steve?" "1133, Steve." "And this place too, Steve." "The dames!" "Remember the times we had here?" "Steve, there was a picture of Peg in there once, wasn't it?" "Remember the bar, the four stools covered with leather?" "Remember the wonderful parties?" "Remember the fun?" "And that crack in the ceiling." "You were always trying to get it fixed." "Remember?" "Stop it." "This guy understands only one language." "I speak it." "Is that your handwriting?" "I don't know." "Give me a pencil." "Here." "Write those numbers again." "Well, I'd say that's it." "I don't know." "Could be." "Hey!" "He's gone!" "Big Band, Muffled ]" "What'll it be?" "Give me a beer." "Remember me?" "Should I?" "Sure." "A year ago, you sold me some blood— Steve Rawley's." "I was the guy with 30 pieces of silver." "When you got around to paying' me, it was only 15." "You want the rest?" "Papers say he skipped." "I don't know where." "He had a girl." "Good-lookin' fellow like Steve probably had a stable." "I'm being real nice, friend, so don't stretch it out." "Some bars are horizontal, others stand up straight." " You got nothin' on me." " Don't start me lookin'." "All right." "She's a blonde, 5'6"." "Something you wouldn't be ashamed to walk down the street with." "Where does she live?" "I don't know, but she likes martinis." "That's bad if you don't follow up with food." "That she gets across the street." "Hey, ain't you forgetting' somethin'?" "Oh, sure." "Here's a quarter for the beer." "Exeter-1133." "Mean anything to you?" "No." "Yeah." "Farmington-1133." "No." "Now lay off me." "I never saw the paper before." "I'm getting fed up, and if you don't come through pretty soon, you're gonna need new front teeth." "Wait a minute." "Maybe it ain't a telephone number." "Maybe it's a street number." "It could be a street number, couldn't it, Steve?" "Or a social security number." "This is a waste of time." "What are you trying to do, kill him?" "It could happen." "Get a load of this." "He had it hid." "It was stuck under a drawer in his own house." "Hey." "This could be the combination of a safe." "Take him and put him to bed." "Don't just stand there!" "Right away, ma'am." "All right, ma'am." "Get the size of that mouth, boys." "And it's a mouth that can yell, and don't you forget it." "How do you expect him to tell you anything in that condition?" "Aw, get lost!" "Okay." "Take him inside." "He'll keep." "He's there, all right." "Room 204." "But he isn't having a picnic." "I don't get you." "There are some people with him as interested to know where he hid the money as we are." "I don't think we should stand in their way." "So, what do we do?" "Wait." "Watch." "I'll be back in a couple of hours to relieve you." "If you don't mind, Slavin, look at that building once in a while." "All you have to do to open it is turn the knob." "Well, if it isn't the man who makes new heads." "Have a seat, Doctor." "Used one of these for years, since somebody told me to cut my throat." "Mr. Jawald." "Where is he?" "Why don't you ask the police?" "They couldn't tell me anything." "No one realizes the man's doubtful condition." "Police are looking for an ex-convict." "Technically, he is, because he was paroled in my custody." "I'll tell you what he is." "He's Steve Rawley, a hood with a record as long as your arm." "And I'll tell you something else about him." "He'll remember that money and try to get it." "You may have cut out a piece of his brain, but you didn't operate on his pockets." "You're not a very cooperative man." "It's not a very cooperative world." "My only interest in this case is the welfare of my patient." "After I get the money, he's all yours." "You holdin' his hand?" "What's it to you?" "Maybe I'm jealous, or maybe I figure you're trying to hug the inside rail." "What are you talking about?" "Get out of here." "Haven't you done enough for one day?" "If you're trying to cozy up to him and cut us out, it won't work." "Steve's in real bad trouble, Peg, so don't count on him." "You better play it across the board." "In any race, you'd run last." "I gotta get away." "I gotta get away." "Yes, darling, we'll both get away." "The police are chasing me." "I gotta get away." "Don't." "Don't." "Don't." "Police." "Gotta get away." "Steve." "Steve, you're tough, and you're plenty sharp." "Don't let 'em— Don't let 'em outsmart you now." "Don't let 'em." "Don't let 'em." "Pick your lucky number." "Everybody down." "Put your money on the number." "Spin the wheel." "Lucky number 19." "Sweet candy for the sweet gentleman." "Here you are, handsome— a nice big box of candy for your best girl." "You're my best" "Oh!" "Never take me." "Never catch me, put me in a cage." "Steve." "Steve, darling." "Wake up." "You were having a bad dream." "You all right?" "I guess so." "I never should have left you alone with them." "Here, darling." "Have a cigarette." "Why did you do that?" "You always used to do that." "Huh." "Was I that broke?" "You said you wanted to cut down on your smoking." "Oh, Peg." "Peg!" "Steve darling, don't!" "I'm all mixed up." "My brain is in a scramble." "Who am I?" "What am I?" "It's the beating you took." "I'm to blame, darling." "I was hurt." "I thought you were trying to fool me too." "No." "These are nothing." "They hurt on top, not inside." "And you know why?" "'Cause there's— there's nothing inside to hurt." "I'm dead." "Your friends oughta be arrested for beating up a corpse." "If I'd only known you were so sick." "Peg." "What I was saying just now in that dream, did it- did it make any sense?" "You said you were being chased." "That's right." "I was on an amusement pier." "It was Christmas Eve." "It was like a jungle." "I kept running." "I don't know why." "I was blocked everywhere I turned." "Then I was in a post office." "I don't know how I got there." "They were gonna mail me away with a three-cent stamp." "And you were in that dream, Peg." "You were running the wheel of fortune." "You were spinning it." "I won a box of candy from you." "The wheel must have been fixed." "Don't you think you'd better get some sleep?" "Funny why all this—" "Why an amusement pier, huh?" "Why did I always keep running, Peg?" "Steve Rawley was frightened." "He was always frightened." "Maybe I shouldn't have said that." "No." "Go ahead." "If I'm this character everybody says I am, maybe I'd better find out about myself." "You could find it in any police blotter." "That jungle you mentioned, Steve— we were both in it." "It was awhirl like a flea circus." "Everybody packed in." "The scramble for nickels never stopped." "We grew tough." "Do you wanna hear more?" "Go ahead." "I like to hear you talk." "You must be feeling better." "I guess I'll be all right if I can just find my head." "One thing." "Yes?" "Whatever else I was, I had good taste." "Monotonous, isn't it?" "Yeah, this is the fifth day." "Any action?" "Well, one of 'em went out this morning, got some groceries, came right back." "They must have some plan." "We're in the unfortunate position." "We have to wait." "I've waited so long, a little excitement would kill me." "When it happens, it won't be little." "Don't go playing bingo." "It could happen soon." "I'll see ya." "Aw, come on, boys." "Let me in the game, will ya?" "I" " I won't cheat anymore." "You think he's sorry?" "You think he's repentant?" "Nah, he'll never change." "What do you got?" "Twenty." "Hmm." "You win again." "You here to talk, Steve?" "I came to borrow a cigarette— two of 'em." "Here." "Take the pack." "Thanks." "You know, Steve," "I'm a businessman." "Is that so?" "Yeah." "And with businessmen, time is money." " Get to the point." " I look at it this way." "You spent a year on ice." "That oughta be worth something." "Say, 50% of the take." "That's, uh, 65 grand net." "So let's stop kidding' each other." "None of us are gettin' any younger." "I don't like being pushed around." "So even if I did suddenly remember where I stashed the money, it wouldn't do you any good." "I'd still charge you the other 65 grand for damages." "Sit down, Arnie." "Okay, Steve." "You got your smokes." "Now go on back in the kitchen and start thinkin'." "You got exactly one hour." "If you don't come across by then, well, we'll be out of money... and you'll be out of time." "Do I make myself clear?" "Sure." "But you better get me when my back is turned, because I'm gonna take at least one of you with me when I go." "You gave him the ticket." "Don't get in an uproar." "Just an idea I had to get him to lead us to the dough." "I left the back door unlocked." "You what?" "Where he goes, we go." "Wait downstairs." "Give us the high sign when they skip." "Right." "They gave me an hour." "What?" "They're businessmen, didn't you know?" "In exactly 60 minutes, they're gonna liquidate their assets." "They're bluffing." "Anything happens to you, they'll never find the money." "If they work on me once more, I swear I'll—" "No, Steve, don't!" "That's the old Steve— wild and crazy." "You said I came from a jungle, didn't you?" "I thought I found a new Steve." "Look, this is me, whoever I am." "Don't try to put a halo around my head." "It doesn't fit." "Oh, Steve." "Steve." "Just stick with me, will ya?" "You mean we're gonna start running again?" "We've gotta get out of here." "I need something to jimmy that door." "Maybe this will work." "Peg." "Peg, it worked." "Easy." "Come on." "Peg, we're gonna need money." "I've got $10." "Oh, that's great." "I got a ring we could hock." "No." "No, Peg." "Big money." "We gotta find that dough." "Steve, you can't be serious." "Why not?" "It's mine, isn't it?" "I stole it." "I served time for it." "Now it'll give us a clear start." "A clear start to where?" "No, Steve darling." "We can leave town, get work." "I can model." "We'll make out." "Wait a minute." "In that nightmare, there was a post office." "Could this be a box number?" "Driver, take us to the post office." "Steve, change your mind." "Maybe it's here somewhere." "Throw it away." "Then we can throw away the past." "I have no past." "It's a blank wall." "Come on." "There it is— 1133." "Can you tell me who rents box 1133?" "1133?" "Just a moment." "I'll see." "Yes." "That's, uh, rented by Hillside Linen Import Limited." " Are you sure?" " They've had the box for over 15 years." "Thank you." "Dreams." "Next thing it'll be tea leaves." "I must be getting soft in the head." "We don't need the money." "We don't, huh?" "I haven't got change of a quarter." "The post office is only part of that dream." "Most of the time, I was running up and down the pier." "It's a long shot, but let's give it a try." "Come on." "It's only a nickel!" "Win a prize here, folks!" "She was in my nightmare." "She gave me that laugh every time the police got close to me." "Come on." "Win a prize, folks." "Just a few more numbers open." "How's about one, mister?" "Win her a box of candy." "That's where I won the box of candy from you." "It was a crazy dream, Steve." "All right." "Check your packages." "Get your packages checked here." "Twenty-five cents." "Thirty cents." "I said 25." "Thank you." "All right." "Who's next?" "Check your packages." "Ladies, take a load off your feet." "Check your packages." "Uh, one—" "Hmm." "Great little woman I married." "You'd think this concession was all hers." "When did you leave it, mister?" "About a year ago, just before Christmas." "Well, we don't seem to have it anymore." "Well, that check came from here, didn't it?" "That's his scribbling', all right." "My scribb— Look, I tried to tell—" "No." "No, I ain't gonna let this woman get my blood pressure up." "I just ain't gonna allow it." "Now, when did you say you checked it?" "Last year, the day before Christmas." "Oh, well, we only hold unclaimed stuff 60 days." "After all, what can you expect for a quarter?" "Thirty cents." "No doubt we threw it out months ago." "Threw it out?" "Yeah, sure." "For once, this husband of mine is probably right." " What was it you checked, mister?" " Yeah." "A package, a box of candy." "Please try to find it." "Box of" " Who'd check a box of candy and want it back a year later?" "It'd get stale." "Yeah, like you after I married you." "Boy, did I get into something." "Now, now, now." "Save your breath, Mayme." "A women of your age, you know." "You ain't got much of it left." "If I have an inch, you have four." "You make me do all the work around here." "I make you work?" "Wait!" "Wait a minute, will ya?" "Will you please try to find my package?" "Oh, yeah." "Now, what was it you wanted again, mister?" "A package— number 1133." "Oh, yeah, yeah." "I'll take a look." "In the back." "Look on the shelf in back of the clock." "If you can't find anything else, you might be able to find what time it is." "Why don't you go back home to your mother, Mayme, huh?" "Hey, this might be it." "We might get lucky." "That candy box can turn into another kind of box, Steve— one they'll bury you in." "Nope." "Nope." "Somebody must have ate it." "Uh, probably her." "Very funny." "Mind if I have a look?" "Nah, sure." "Go ahead." "Get yourself dusty." "Thanks." "I couldn't reach the top shelf." "All right." "You can check it for a quarter." "How about that package, lady?" "Check it for a quarter." "Here." "All right." "Who— Hey, you're a lucky guy." "But that'll cost you a dollar and a quarter storage." "$1.30. $1.30." "Here." "Here." "Give him five." "Come on." "Five— Ah!" "Don't move your number." "Thirty-four is the winner." "Well, what do you know?" "The candy isn't stale." "It's poison." "Are you crazy?" "Maybe." "All of a sudden, a dollar is a piece of paper crawling with germs." "Is that it?" "If you keep it, I can't go on with you." "I'm in love with another man." "The guy without change of a quarter?" "When you're in love, a quarter's just two dimes and a nickel." "What's the matter?" "Uh-uh." "Company's coming." "Come on." "We can argue this out in Europe someday." "Send me a postcard." "Havin' a good time, Peg?" "Sure." "With popcorn." "Where's that meal ticket of yours?" "I want to punch him full of holes." "Look, Steve and that money are somewhere on the pier." "Come on." "Start walkin'." "Going somewhere, Steve?" "I was." "But I always got time to speak to a friend!" "Lefty, there!" "You take that track." "I'll take this one." "Right." "Rawley!" "Rawley!" "Pardon me, but do you happen to have $130,000 on you?"