"(TIRES SCREECHING)" "(NO AUDIBLE DIALOGUE)" "(FOOTSTEPS)" "(GROANS)" "(GASP) You're hurt." "Let me get a doctor." "No." "No, Sister." "I want a priest." "I'm dying." "I'm here all alone." "Sister, please." "(COUGH) Help me." "Help me." "I'm listening." "I..." "I sent... a man to prison." "I knew he was innocent." "(COUGHING)" "Heavenly Father, forgive me." "I've sinned." "♪ (THEME) ♪" "Mannix s5e14 To Save A Dead Man" "That's where it's at, Joe." "If you want to score, you've got to putt." "The Gospel according to Father Fain." "How are you, Father?" "Fine." "Fine." "You got a game?" "No, no." "I just finished 18 with some high-handicap bandits." "Yeah." "Wouldn't you think those gentlemen would respect my vows of poverty?" "Which means, uh, you cleaned 'em out and don't know what to do with the loot." "Oh, there's always God's work, Joe." "Mmm." "In other words, the parish school needs a new... roof!" "Oh, look at that." "No, the bandits paid for the roof a month ago." "I'm working on a new paint job now." "But I do have a favor to ask of you, Joe." "Just ask, Father." "There's a nun." "One of our younger teachers." "I'd like you to see her." "Professionally." "Why would a nun need a private detective?" "I told Father Fain that I had to do something." "That poor dying man haunts me." "He was trying to erase his sin against this other man-- an innocent man that he had put in prison." "With his last dying breath, he was trying to tell me the man's name." "What do you think, Joe?" "I don't know." "It's not going to be easy to find the man." "I mean, I've never talked to a convict who wasn't innocent." "Mr. Mannix, Al Murphy was a dying man." "He was pleading his guilt before God." "He was saying that he had sinned, that he had borne false witness." "I understand, Sister." "I was only trying to warn you." "The odds against finding that particular innocent man are a little frightening." "But you will try?" "Uh, please don't expect a miracle." "Joe, we're always expecting miracles." "That's our bag." "Yeah." "You proved that on a golf course." "Albert Murphy, killed in a traffic accident a couple of nights ago." "That's him." "(PAPERS RUSTLING)" "Well, two arrests for drunk driving." "According to the coroner's report, he was loaded that night." "What did he do for a living?" "He ran a pizza parlor the last six years." "Before that?" "Before that, he was a desk clerk." "Where?" "Well, a desk clerk is a desk clerk." "What difference does it make?" "Art, uh, does it say?" "The Vallejo Towers." "The Vallejo Towers." "Vallejo Towers." "Art, wasn't there a murder or something there about five, six years ago?" "Yeah." "Uh, Mrs. C.W. Taggart was strangled by her boyfriend." "Yeah." "And for a couple of weeks, the columnists had a ball with the secret life of C.W. Taggart, the billionaire who couldn't buy everything." "What has that got to do with Al Murphy?" "He was working the desk at the Vallejo Towers." "There could've been some connection." "I was there when they interrogated the murderer-- a man named Kilgore." "He was a junior executive in the Taggart Enterprises." "Did Homicide question Al Murphy at the time?" "Wouldn't have made any difference." "Kilgore gave us a full confession." "What happened to him?" "He pleaded guilty in return for a reduced sentence." "Drew ten to life." "Where's he doing his time?" "(Art) Soledad." "Al Murphy?" "(Mannix) He was a witness at your trial." "He was working the desk at the Vallejo Towers the day you were arrested." "Yeah, I remember him." "Is it possible that what he said on the witness stand helped convict you?" "Are you kidding?" "I killed Alice Taggart." "I confessed to the police and pleaded guilty." "Al Murphy didn't send me up." "I made it on my own." "Before he died, he confessed that he had helped send an innocent man to prison." "Some other guy, Mannix." "If Lyle Grandt hadn't handled my case," "I would've been doing death-row time." "As it is, I'm eligible for parole in a couple of years, so let it be, okay?" "When I'm sure it is okay." "What's that?" "A transcript of your trial." "Why bring all that up again?" "Maybe some of these words will sound different to you after six years." "Enough to remember something." "Now, let's, uh, start with the confession you signed at the Wilshire station after your arrest." "(Kilgore) Mrs. Taggart-- Alyce.. called me at the office at 2:00 this afternoon." "You getting all this?" "She sounded strange, nervous." "She told me she was at the suite at the Vallejo Towers, and she wanted me to come over right away." "What's this all about, Alyce?" "About goodbye, Ted." "Why?" "You bore me." "You can't end it just like that." "I have ended it." "It's over." ""I'd never seen Alyce like that." "I didn't know what to think." ""I was desperate." "All I knew was I was losing her." "I couldn't let her go."" "Alyce, can't we talk it over?" "I don't know what's happened, but" "Stop begging, Ted." "It's not becoming." "Well, maybe this is." "It's going to take more than a couple of ice cubes to put me off." "Don't touch me." "You've been watching too many late movies on television." "(GRUNTING)" "(SCREAMS)" "(SCREAMS)" "(SQUEALS)" "(SCREAMING)" "(GRUNTS)" "(GASPS)" "(Mannix) "That's the last I remember" ""until I realized my hands were around her throat." "I knew she was dead."" "It says here you then went to the phone, told the desk to call the police 'cause you'd murdered a woman." "Yeah." "And the man on the desk was Al Murphy?" "I guess so." "If you thought Murphy knew something that might clear you, you still wouldn't care to change your confession?" "What could Murphy know?" "I told it the way it happened." "Let it be, Mannix." "(Mannix) For a while, I thought we might have a small miracle going for us, Sister, but Kilgore insists he's guilty." "Joe, maybe that's the miracle we should be looking for." "What miracle's that?" "The convicted man who clings steadfastly to his own guilt." "Well, as you say, in the world behind bars, all prisoners protest their innocence." "Well, doesn't Kilgore's attitude strike you as significant?" "I'm afraid I find it's a dead end, Father." "Mr. Mannix, perhaps we could talk to the attorney that defended Mr. Kilgore." "But, uh, what could we hope to accomplish, Sister?" "Al Murphy's testimony didn't send Kilgore to prison." "Oh, but Mr. Murphy clearly thought otherwise to the very depths of his soul." "All right." "Uh..." "I'll arrange a meeting with Kilgore's attorney, Lyle Grandt." "As a matter of fact, Sister, I remember Mr. Murphy very well." "Then his testimony at the Kilgore trial was a decisive factor?" "No." "I'm sorry." "What convinced you that Kilgore was guilty, Mr. Grandt?" "Well, my client himself." "He made a full confession to the police and refused to retract a word of it." "I took all the delays I could reasonably ask of the court, hoping he'd change his mind, but he didn't." "Believe me, it was a battle all the way." "Even to convince him that he had to make an initial plea of innocent so that we could see the prosecution's case." "Are you saying that you had doubts about Mr. Kilgore's confession?" "No, Sister." "I believed it." "But an attorney has a special obligation to a client." "Not to turn the guilty loose on society, but to be certain that the person standing trial has every opportunity to present mitigating circumstances." "In other words, you were hoping that during the prosecution's presentation, something would make Kilgore want to fight for his life?" "Yes, I was." "However, that wasn't to be." "(CHUCKLES)" "Poor Kilgore." "Imagine his temptation." "Not only was Alyce Taggart a devastatingly beautiful woman, she was the wife of the world's wealthiest enigma" "C.W. Taggart, man or myth?" "Kilgore's love affair was... a secret within a mystery." "The danger alone... exciting." "(SIGH)" "I'm really sorry, Sister." "That's all right." "I.." "I think I understand." "Well, it comes down to this." "Kilgore went into his trial wanting the gas chamber." "At least I was able to talk him out of that." "Well, I guess that about covers it." "You agree, Sister?" "Yes, I suppose so." "Thank you for your time, Mr. Grandt." "Not at all." "Yes." "You've been most considerate." "My pleasure." "(DOOR CLOSES)" "Ed Noble, please." "This is Lyle Grandt." "(INTERCOM BUZZES)" "Noble." "Ed, a private detective named Mannix just left my office." "He's taking an interest in the Kilgore case." "Naturally, Ed." "It's my job to be convincing." "I just thought that you should know in case you thought something should be done." "Hi, Peggy." "How was the meeting with Kilgore's attorney?" "Well, I hate to see a man lose his shot at salvation, Peggy, but I'm afraid Al Murphy's going to have to make it without my help." "I wouldn't bet on that." "You know that pizza parlor of his?" "Yeah." "What about it?" "It's a franchise operation." "I wired the home office." "Here's their answer." "Al Murphy paid $15,000 for that business, in cash." "Hmm." "And just two days after Kilgore was sentenced." "Mr. Murphy didn't make that kind of money working the desk at the Vallejo Towers." "Nice work, Peggy." "Oh, uh, see if you can get Sister Meg on the phone." "You're gonna tell her about it?" "Not exactly." "I just want her to know that we may have stubbed our toe on a small miracle." "What do you got?" "My friend at the credit bureau dug up Al Murphy's file out of the dead accounts section." "Very bad rating." "Well, that sure keeps our miracle alive, doesn't it?" "The question is, where'd he get the money to buy that franchise?" "(DOOR OPENS)" "Mr. Mannix?" "Yes." "Come in, Miss" "Linholm." "Adrianne Linholm." "How do you do?" "Would you like some coffee, Miss Linholm?" "No, thank you." "Please, sit down." "Now, uh, what can I do for you, Miss Linholm?" "Save me a great deal of money." "At least my board of directors are convinced you're the man to do it." "Board of directors?" "Royal Palms Sugar." "We have a director's meeting here on the mainland twice a year." "Our plant's in Hawaii." "I see." "Now, uh, about this money you mentioned." "We're losing over $100,000 a year." "A product that never reaches the market." "After it's refined, it vanishes." "Well, don't you have plant security forces, private police?" "They're not very efficient, or professional, obviously." "Mm-hmm." "That's why I'm here." "To offer you a $5,000 retainer, Mr. Mannix, against 15,000 if you can stop these thieves." "That's very generous." "We're very worried." "And I suppose you want me on the job yesterday?" "Well, naturally." "This thing has to be stopped as quickly as possible." "We'll fly to the islands in my private jet tomorrow morning." "(SIGH)" "I'm afraid that's out of the question, Miss Linholm." "Why?" "Well, I'm committed to another client right now." "What would it take to get you uncommitted?" "I'm sorry." "Really sorry." "My personal check for $5,000." "It's yours if you can make some arrangement for this other case." "Don't take too long, Mr. Mannix." "You know how perishable paper can be." "Hmm." "I do, indeed." "At least $100 an ounce." "(DOOR OPENS)" "(DOOR CLOSES) What was that all about, Joe?" "I strongly suspect, Peggy, it has something to do with keeping Al Murphy out of heaven." "I know my coming here like this can't make any sense to you, Sister." "Mrs. Kilgore, I really don't understand you." "I would think you'd go to all lengths to secure your husband's vindication and freedom." "If that were possible, Sister, yes." "But, you see, I've.." "I've lived with that hope for a long time." "Dreamed that something might happen to reverse Ted's conviction." "But if your husband is innocent" "But he isn't, Sister." "That's the point." "He did kill that woman." "If I can say it, and I can believe it, certainly anyone can." "I loved Ted." "I still love him." "But it happened." "Mr. Murphy believed your husband was innocent." "What could he have done to make him believe that he had helped send your husband to prison unjustly?" "I don't know anything about Mr. Murphy." "I'm sorry for him, but he did not put my husband in prison." "Sister, we lived through the trial, the years after the trial-- the children and I." "You don't know how hard that was on them." "I don't think we could take it again." "Not a new trial." "Not when it has to come out the same way." "She said she got a letter from her husband that he was worried and afraid that you might spoil his chances for a parole, so she called his lawyer." "And he sent her to you." "She might be right." "I thought we were just fulfilling Al Murphy's intentions to die with a clear conscience." "But not everyone can be wrong." "I'm not so sure, Sister." "For example, this is the testimony" "Murphy gave in the Kilgore trial." "Now, if you'll, uh, just start there with paragraph two." "That's the questioning by the prosecutor." "Mr. Murphy, will you tell the court, in your own words, what you recall about the afternoon in question?" "Well, about 2:00, our regular switchboard operator was taking a break, so I had the board and the desk as well." "Got a call from Room 418." "It was a woman's voice asking to make an outside call." "To what number, Mr. Murphy?" "Uh, KL5-6131." "For the record, that phone is listed as a private line in the office of the defendant, Theodore Kilgore." "Go on, Mr. Murphy, please." "Well, about 20 minutes later, I saw the defendant walking through the lobby." "Then it must have been 10, 12 minutes later," "I got another call from Room 418." "This time it was Mr. Kilgore." "He identified himself?" "Yes, he did." "He said he killed a woman, and would I call the police." "Thank you, Mr. Murphy." "Your witness, Mr. Grandt." "No cross-examination, Your Honor." "I don't understand." "Is this all?" "That's it." "That's Murphy's entire contribution." "But it's nothing we haven't heard from everyone else." "That's what shakes me up, Sister." "If Murphy lied, then everyone is lying." "Item 1:" "Grandt passed on cross-examining Murphy." "Why?" "At that point in the trial, he was supposed to be defending his client all-out." "Item 2:" "Kilgore is supposed to have taken a year's lease on Suite 418." "Now, how can a man that only makes $20,000 dollars a year afford a suite that goes for $75 a day?" "(KNOCK ON DOOR)" "Yeah, Peggy?" "The corporate pedigree of Miss Linholm's Royal Palms Sugar Corporation" "Uh, let me guess." "A subsidiary of C.W. Taggart Enterprises." "After you get through all the fine print." "Look, Peggy, would you make a call for me?" "Call Miss Linholm." "Tell her I'm very sorry, but I'm going to have to let that check of hers deteriorate." "Right." "You know, Sister, I suddenly feel very good about Mr. Murphy getting his visa into heaven." "Let's see if we can give his cause a little nudge in the right direction." "Where are we going, Mr. Mannix?" "I'd like to ask Mrs. Kilgore about her husband's financial situation." "Oh, Mr. Mannix, I promised Mrs. Kilgore that I'd ask you to drop the case." "Well, if you don't mind, Sister, I'd like her to ask me." "Mrs. Kilgore?" "Yes?" "Uh, my name is Joe Mannix." "I'm a private investigator." "You know the sister." "No, I'm afraid I don't." "No." "No, we've never met." "Well, uh, Sister Costello and I would like to talk to you about your husband." "Come in." "Thank you." "All right, Mr. Mannix." "What about my husband?" "We feel there's a good chance that he didn't kill Alyce Taggart." "Have you talked to Ted about that?" "The other day." "And he's still saying he's guilty." "Then why should I believe you?" "Do you think he's a murderer?" "What difference does it make?" "It's not going to change anything, is it?" "And you're satisfied he was having an affair with Alyce Taggart?" "He testified that he was, under oath." "According to the record of the trial, your husband was paying over $500 a week to lease that apartment at the Vallejo Towers." "Now, did he have that kind of money?" "Of course not." "He was under oath when he told the court he did." "Now, if that was a lie, couldn't the testimony regarding his relationship with Mrs. Taggart also have been a lie?" "He's a man." "He had his pride." "Mrs. Taggart was paying for that apartment." "Did your husband tell you that?" "He didn't have to." "That's him." "Oh, thank you." "The woman who pretended she was Mrs. Kilgore merely wanted me to take you off the case." "That's right." "Mr. Mannix, I find it hard to believe that there are people who are really like that." "Well, they don't usually come in your place of business, Sister." "Thank you." "(ENGINE STARTS)" "Let's go." "(TIRES SCREECHING)" "(TIRES SCREECHING)" "(TIRES CONTINUE SCREECHING)" "(RIFLE FIRES)" "(RIFLE FIRES)" "(RIFLE FIRES)" "(RIFLE FIRES)" "(Mannix) What's the news, Doc?" "Surprisingly good." "Your seat belt kept you from ramming your head through that windshield." "Now tell me the bad news." "You'll feel a little shaky for the next few days." "Expect some headaches, neck pains." "I'd recommend several days of bed rest." "(Peggy) He won't listen to you, Doctor." "(Mannix) Hi, Peggy." "Joe, you all right?" "Yeah, sure." "Sure." "I'm fine, I guess." "Stay in bed, Mr. Mannix." "Take it easy." "That's the word." "Who did it, Joe?" "I don't know, but if you'll leave me alone so I can get dressed and get out of here, I may find out." "But the doctor just said you have to give yourself a chance." "Peggy, somebody wants me to join Al Murphy." "I can't just lie around here and wait." "But, Joe, the doctor just said" "Peggy, would you leave me alone so I can get dressed?" "(SIGH)" "Where are you going?" "Back to prison." "Thought I'd seen the last of you." "Someone tried to arrange that." "What happened?" "There's a contract out on me." "Contract?" "And I got a feeling your name's on it, too." "You've seen it?" "I don't have to." "Once they get me, you're the only one left who can make waves over Alyce Taggart's murder." "Why would I make waves?" "I killed her." "You didn't kill her." "No?" "Then tell me all about it." "Someone else strangled Alyce Taggart." "You're getting paid off to take the rap." "More money than you'd ever see in a lifetime." "(CHUCKLE) Fairy tale." "Well, the attempt on my life was real." "And it happened because I wouldn't buy your confession." "Don't be a fool, Kilgore." "You'll never see dime one of that payoff." "It'll be a knife in the back." "In the shower room or the recreation yard, someplace." "There's nothing much I can do about that, is there, according to you?" "You can tell me who really killed Alyce Taggart." "I killed her!" "All right, Kilgore." "If you won't help me, I can't help you." "You stick to your story, but don't turn your back on anyone." "Did I send for you, Mannix?" "No." "But when you do, it'll be too late." "It'll happen, believe me, before you ever hit the outside." "Mannix!" "Mannix, how could anything I say now make any difference?" "Who'd believe me?" "Everybody here on the inside wants out." "No one's going to think you're stir-crazy if I can make what you tell me hold up." "(SIGH)" "I..." "I d.." "I don't know." "I" "I'm thinking of my wife and kids." "Was that part of the deal-- their safety?" "Yeah." "How long do you think that deal will hold up if you're hit?" "Now, the real killer has got to think you told your wife the whole story." "Look, Kilgore, you're the only one that can do it." "Either you tell me who killed Alyce Taggart, or you're dead and so is your whole family." "They'd kill you before you could get close to C.W. Taggart." "Are you saying Taggart killed his wife?" "And that Taggart paid the rent on that apartment?" "Even though it was in your name, it was his playpen?" "Was Taggart there when you got there that afternoon?" "Let's hear it, Kilgore." "Someone was in that suite." "Who?" "Who?" "Ed Noble, first vice president, next down the line from Taggart." "It was he who called me at the office, and it was he who told me to come over to the Towers." "Noble called you, not Mrs. Taggart?" "That's right." "And you accepted his story that Taggart killed his wife?" "That's the way it is when you work for C.W. Taggart." "After a while, you get used to the idea that Ed Noble's voice is C.W. Taggart's." "I never met the great man face-to-face, and I was a Taggart executive for two years." "Everything you've ever heard about C.W.'s lifestyle is gospel." "Uh-huh." "Oh, uh, what did Noble tell you when you got to that apartment?" "Well, he showed me her body." "Then he told me that she'd caught C.W. with another woman and that she was going to create a scandal." "She was going to drag him through the courts." "So... there was a fight, and, uh, he strangled her." "You accepted that?" "Of course I accepted it." "She was lying there dead." "Yeah." "I heard that you were shot at, your car had been forced off the road." "You could've been killed." "I want you to stop worrying, Sister." "In my job, if you don't have nine lives, you can't get a license." "Was the attack in any way connected with what you've been doing about Mr. Murphy?" "Well, I could tell you a little white lie." "I won't." "The truth is yes." "In that case, I worry about even one of your lives being threatened." "Excuse me, Sister." "Peggy, I want you to build a fire under that manager at the Vallejo Towers." "I need that employment record now." "I'm on it." "Let me know the second you get anything." "Mr. Mannix, I'd like you to drop the case." "There's no need to sacrifice your life to save a dead man from his own sins." "I appreciate your releasing me, Sister, but right now I'm not fighting to save Al Murphy's soul." "I'm fighting to stay alive." "I see." "Then there's nothing I can say." "I'm afraid not." "It's out of my hands." "Then I can pray for your intentions." "That I can do." "I can use all the help I can get, Sister." "Is that it?" "Al Murphy's employment record." "Yeah." "This does it for me." "Call Lieutenant Malcolm, tell him I'll be in his office in half an hour." "(Art) All right." "Maybe Kilgore was telling you the truth, Joe, but your theory about this whole case is pretty wild." "Yeah, well, somebody doesn't agree with you." "All right." "The dynamite's real enough." "But the rest of it?" "It all makes sense, Art." "Nobody has seen C.W. Taggart for years." "Maybe he's dead." "Oh, come on, Joe." "Well, have you talked to him recently?" "Has anyone?" "For you, Lieutenant." "Oh, thanks, Mike." "Here." "This is a picture of C.W. Taggart taken three months ago, with a telephoto lens, by an enterprising freelance photographer." "Here's when he made his last public appearance-- a Congressional hearing nine years ago." "Now, you're not going to tell me that isn't the same man?" "I don't know." "The man in this photo could be a double standing in for Taggart." "(ART CHUCKLES) That's going to be a very tough sale, Joe." "All right now." "Let's just assume, for argument's sake, Art, that I'm right-- that C.W. Taggart died eight years ago, and, like he did everything else, in secret." "And his board of directors put a look-alike in his chair?" "That's right." "And they even married him off to Alyce Taggart for window dressing." "That way, they could control the whole Taggart empire." "Joe, when a C.W. Taggart chooses not to show up anywhere for a while, all sorts of stories spring up." "Come on, Art." "We're talking about billions of dollars." "The men who fronted for Taggart wouldn't let that kind of money get away from them." "And Taggart's lifestyle would make it easy." "Except for the palace guards and Alyce" "Taggart, who'd ever know there was a switch?" "I have one question." "How do you prove you're right?" "Make Taggart prove I'm wrong." "That's very interesting." "How?" "I'll charge him with attempted murder." "Of whom?" "Me." "Gentlemen, what can I do for you?" "Mr. Noble, I'm Lieutenant Malcolm, Los Angeles Police Department." "I'd like to see Mr. Taggart, please." "I'm sorry, Lieutenant." "That's impossible." "No one's allowed in his private suite." "But I'm his first vice president." "Perhaps you can discuss your business with me." "I'm afraid not." "This is an official matter." "Can you tell me what it's all about?" "Yeah." "Mr. Mannix here has sworn out a complaint against Mr. Taggart." "Your boss hired a couple of killers to get rid of me." "There have been two near misses." "That's absurd." "We didn't come here for your opinion, Mr. Noble." "We'd like to see Mr. Taggart." "I'm sorry, Mr. Mannix, but I can assure you Mr. Taggart doesn't even know you're alive." "What possible interest could he have in killing you?" "That's why we'd like to talk to him." "We'd like to hear the answer." "Out of the question." "We could always come back with a warrant for Mr. Taggart's arrest." "Do that, Lieutenant." "At your own risk, of course." "All we want to do is talk to him." "Mr. Taggart has nothing to say to you." "Why?" "Because the real C.W. Taggart died eight years ago, and you don't trust the look-alike you've got warming his seat to handle a few questions as to why he wants me dead?" "(CHUCKLES)" "Perhaps we can make a deal, Mr. Mannix." "What if I could satisfy you on that score?" "Try me." "We've heard the imposter allegation before, of course." "I suppose it's to be expected when a man like Mr. Taggart decides he's had enough of public life." "If you gentlemen will excuse me for a minute." "Where are you going?" "It's 6:00." "Mr. Taggart will be having his sundown martini." "I should be able to switch glasses without his realizing what I'm doing." "Of course, I expect Mr. Mannix to accept the fingerprints on that glass as proof that he's totally mistaken in his conclusions." "(DOOR OPENS, CLOSES)" "Noble shot you down in flames, Joe." "The prints on that glass are fresh, and they belong to Mr. C.W. Taggart." "Are you sure?" "Yeah." "Taggart was a navy flyer during World War ll." "We verified the prints off his enlistment record." "Face it, Joe." "C.W. Taggart is alive and drinking." "If he is, Kilgore's story adds up." "Noble got him to take the rap for the murder." "How do you know Kilgore wasn't lying to you when he said he didn't do it?" "Maybe he saw a way out for himself." "If he was lying, why the contract out on me?" "You've been a target before." "Maybe it's somebody else's idea." "An old friend out of the past." "All right, Art." "But if we're going to talk about what happened to Alyce Taggart, let's take a long look at Al Murphy and his employment record." "Does it matter now?" "Now that we know C.W. Taggart's alive?" "But Al Murphy worked the desk at the Barrington Hotel before he moved over to the Vallejo Towers." "And Taggart Enterprises, including C.W. Taggart, occupy the two top floors of the Barrington Hotel, including the penthouse." "Yeah." "Now, if he was the desk clerk at the Barrington Hotel, he would have certainly recognized the voice of the person who called Kilgore from the Vallejo Towers the afternoon of the killing." "I'll buy that, in view of Murphy's troubled conscience." "Why didn't they simply wipe him out?" "They needed him alive and happy, so they paid him $15,000 to sew up the case against Kilgore." "Joe, Kilgore confessed." "That wasn't enough." "The case against Kilgore had to be documented, or somebody in your department might have smelled a rat." "For my money, that case was documented, Joe." "Art, uh, in your tender lifetime, you've had a few martinis?" "One or two." "Off duty." "Uh, have you ever looked at the glass after you finished the drink?" "Why?" "Well, a gin or vodka martini doesn't leave a ring around the glass, does it?" "No, it doesn't." "As you say, uh, C.W. Taggart is alive and drinking." "The question is, what is he drinking?" "Do you mind if I have the lab check this out?" "Come on, Joe." "What difference does it make?" "Only that somebody's trying to kill me and I'd like to know why." "I got a feeling that the only one who can give me all the answers is C.W. Taggart himself." "You can't get in to see him." "Maybe if I drop in unexpectedly, huh?" "When I make the next pass, you go, right?" "Mannix, you were in that helicopter." "That's right." "I wanted to return Mr. Taggart's martini glass." "You chose an unconventional way of doing it." "Well, being that I raised the question about Mr. Taggart's identity," "I thought it was up to me to apologize." "Unnecessary." "But your apology's accepted." "Thank you." "The fingerprints on that glass were definitely Mr. Taggart's, and I was all wrong about his being replaced." "However, the lab did do an analysis of the contents of that glass, and, uh, there's something about it that bothers me." "Why would Mr. Taggart drink a martini that tested out as pure ginger ale?" "Off the record, Mr. Taggart hasn't been well." "He's been taken off alcoholic beverages for a while." "But, uh, you said, specifically, he was having a martini." "Well, you can surely understand why." "Of course." "Of course." "Just one of the many secrets about the legendary C.W. Taggart." "It is." "But then, uh, not really important enough to kill anyone over, is it?" "No one's going to kill you, Mr. Mannix." "We'll escort you downstairs." "But I'd suggest that you might save yourself a lot of trouble by staying away from here in the future." "Mmm." "(GRUNT)" "Hold it!" "(RHYTHMIC METALLIC CREAKING)" "Is that you, Uncle?" "It's all right." "Don't be frightened." "Who is that with you?" "Are they going to play with me?" "No, sonny." "They can't stay." "I'm sorry." "Let's go." "Why don't you just go ahead and shoot me here?" "I'm sure you can make him think it's just a game.. cowboys and Indians." "At least now I understand about the ginger ale." "That doesn't prove a thing." "But it does give us the motive for the murder of Alyce Taggart." "It's all beginning to make sense now." "Is it?" "A great man has a stroke." "It affects his brain." "To dispel any rumors that he might be incapacitated, a wedding's arranged with some girl from the company." "She goes along with it for a couple of years, then decides she wants to cash in." "She wants a lot of money or she'll have C.W. committed and take over herself." "Of course, you couldn't allow her to do that." "No, I couldn't." "Now move." "(GRUNT)" "Art." "Yeah." "Well, Mr. Noble, we had a report of a prowler here." "Got to check it out, you know." "(RHYTHMIC METALLIC CREAKING CONTINUES)" "I never dreamed by asking you to help, that-- that you'd be taking chances like that." "Occupational hazard." "But well worth it, Sister." "Tomorrow, Ted Kilgore walks out of prison a free man." "And maybe we just helped squeeze Al Murphy's foot into heaven's door." "Oh, I certainly hope so."