"♪ (THEME MUSIC PLAYING) ♪" "(ENGINE ROARING)" "(CAR STEREO PLAYING LIGHT JAZZ)" "Mannix s7e08 A World Without Sundays" "(TIRES SCREECHING)" "(ENGINE SPUTTERING)" "(CRICKETS CHIRPING)" "(SETTING PARKING BRAKE)" "(SIGHS)" "(STEREO CLICKS OFF)" "You know, you're not going to believe this." "You're right." "(BOTH LAUGH QUIETLY)" "It's wacky." "I filled up in Vegas." "I should have half a tank at least." "Well... now what?" "Well, we could just sit here." "Hmm?" "I could convince you how smart I was to have taken the back road." "That should take us till about sunrise." "I think I've got a better idea." "I was afraid you would." "I saw a gas station a couple of miles back." "That's what I was afraid of." "All right." "You won't mind being alone?" "Don't be gone long, okay?" "Three things:" "Windows up, doors locked and, uh, miss me." "I'll miss you." "(CRICKETS CHIRPING)" "(POWER WINDOW MOTORS WHIRRING QUIETLY)" "(DRIVER SIDE DOOR LOCK CLICKS)" "(PASSENGER SIDE DOOR LOCK CLICKS)" "(HUMMING NERVOUSLY)" "(CAR APPROACHING)" "Hi." "Hi." "What's the trouble?" "I ran out of gas, about a mile and a half down the road here." "And if you'd give me a lift back to the filling station," "I'd appreciate it." "Well, what do you know?" "Marty Hatch!" "Right?" "That's right." "How about that?" "Right out here in the middle of nowhere!" "Hop in, Marty." "Thank you." "It's a good thing I came along." "That gas station just closed up." "But don't worry, we can siphon a few gallons out of my tank, compliments of Ken Gary and the state of California." "All right, Ken Gary." "Fine." "Hey, shake hands with the guy who thinks you are the greatest, bar none." "And I've seen every quarterback from Sammy Baugh on." "I sure wish you were still playing." "Well, that makes two of us, Ken." "Boy, when the guys hear about this!" "Foreign job, huh?" "I guess you got one of those locked gas caps." "Well, get it open, Marty, and I'll have you out of here in no time." "Right." "Hey, we'll be seeing you on TV Sunday, right?" "Marty Hatch Day at the stadium." "Yeah, right." "Anyone in the League deserves it... you do." "Least they didn't wait for you to die to let you know they cared." "Old football players never die, Ken." "Owners just give 'em a new set of wheels from Detroit and tell 'em to fade away." "No chance the old knee will ever shape up again?" "No chance." "Tough break." "But then the game's been good to you, I guess." "I mean, you know, you're on the right side of 40, and, uh, you're set for life." "Well, you didn't hear me beef, did you, Ken?" "Marty Hatch put up a beef?" "No way!" "Marty Hatch." "You know, the guys will think I'm putting them on." "I'm sorry I had to drag you all the way out here, Mr. Mannix." "Well, that's quite all right." "Still no word?" "No, and I haven't left the house for a second just in case Cathy would call..." "or somebody would call." "Now you said she called you from Vegas last night around 8:00?" "Yeah." "She said she was just leaving." "By plane or car?" "Plane, I guess." "She had a round-trip ticket." "Coffee's on." "Would you like some?" "Yes, thank you." "Black." "Did she go alone?" "Yes." "We had tickets to the opening at the Caravan." "I couldn't get away." "I'm really terribly worried, Mr. Mannix." "Well, she's only been missing a few hours." "I'm sure she'll show up." "If it was anybody else, I wouldn't be so concerned." "But Cathy... if she's gonna be three minutes late, she calls to let you know." "Did you, uh, call the police?" "Yes." "The Las Vegas Police." "They said she checked out of the hotel at about 8:30 last night." "That would have given her time to catch the 9:15 plane." "I called the Las Vegas Airport, and she wasn't on the 9:15 passenger list or any list since then." "Mm-hmm." "Is it possible that she could have gone someplace other than Los Angeles?" "She would have called me." "Mm." "Could she have run into somebody she knew, who was driving back?" "Well, that's possible, of course." "You have any idea who it might have been?" "Nope." "Hmm." "When you talked to her last night on the phone, did she mention any names?" "Anyone at all?" "No." "She just called to tell me that..." "Hey, wait a minute, she did mention somebody." "She said she'd had a drink and a few laughs with some... football player." "Did she say who?" "Yes." "JOANNA:" "Marty Hatch." "What's eating you, Marty?" "Nothing's eating me." "Everything's fine, Dave." "Just fine." "I've been with you a long time." "You get to know." "Yeah." "Well, this time you got your signals crossed." "Okay, pal?" "Okay, pal." "(DOORBELL CHIMES)" "Never mind, Dave;" "I'll get it." "Yeah, what can I do for you?" "My name is Joe Mannix." "You probably don't remember, but a couple of years ago..." "MARTY:" "Oh, yeah." "Yeah, I remember." "Dale Hendry's bash after the 49er game." "You're a private investigator, right?" "That's right." "Well, what can I do for you, Joe?" "For a start, uh, can I come in?" "(LAUGHS) Of course." "Come on." "Joe Mannix, my right hand, Dave Trimble." "Hi." "Yeah, Dave Trimble," "Consensus All-American." "All-Pro nine years straight." "Just eight." "Aw, it's too bad about him." "Dave, do me a favor." "Get on the phone to the agency and ask Koningsberg if he's firmed up that appointment with the publishing dude, okay?" "Right." "Well, nice meetin' ya." "Likewise." "Can I get you a drink, Joe?" "No, thanks." "I got a big day ahead of me." "Well, I don't have to watch the clock anymore." "What brings you here?" "I understand you know Cathy Lawson." "Mm, yeah." "Yeah." "Bumped into her in Vegas last night, as a matter of fact." "Did she drive back with you from Las Vegas?" "Why all the questions?" "Something wrong?" "She's missing." "No kidding." "Her roommate hired me to look for her." "Joanna?" "That, uh..." "that's her name, isn't it?" "Yeah." "Well, uh..." "Joe, Joanna can't afford a private investigator, and I can." "So this one's, uh..." "this one's on me, okay?" "Okay." "Did Cathy drive back with you?" "Well, now you're working for me, right?" "Right." "And that means that anything I say to you is, uh..." "Privileged." "That's the word I was looking for." "Yeah, she rode down with me." "We ran out of gas on the way." "I left her in the car;" "went back to a filling station." "Highway patrolman picked me up, and, uh, when we got back to the car, she was gone." "Did you tell the Highway Patrol?" "You've, uh... heard of Ben Kessler, haven't you, Joe?" "Owns the Caravan and a string of bookie joints." "He owns Cathy, too." ""Owns"?" "Mm-hmm." "And the penalty for trespassing is sudden death." "I take it Kessler didn't know she was driving back with you?" "No, he was out of town." "New Orleans." "(SIGHS)" "But if it ever got into the newspaper that I'd given his girl a lift... (WRY CHUCKLE) good-bye Marty Hatch." "(PHONE RINGING)" "If that's for me, Dave, I'm not here." "All right, Joe, it was stupid." "I... thought that she got scared and started to walk." "Got a lift to L.A." "I didn't know what to do." "Hey, Marty, this call you better take." "Who is it?" "It's from a hospital in San Bernardino." "Woman they brought in early this morning." "She keeps asking for you." "After Marty left, I sat there kind of scared." "I heard a car stop... and I looked out the rear window." "I thought maybe you'd caught a ride back." "Cathy, I don't know how to tell you how sorry I am." "Hey, it's not your fault, Marty." "Then what happened, Miss Lawson?" "Uh... then a man got out of the car." "Anyone you'd ever seen before?" "I-I couldn't tell." "He wore a ski mask." "All I could see were his eyes, staring at me through the car window and a gun pointing at me." "And then what?" "He made me unlock the door." "He pulled me out, dragged me off the road and started choking me." "We heard a car coming, and he panicked." "He-He grabbed for my purse." "I guess I passed out, because the next thing I remember, he was gone... and I was gagged and tied." "So I worked myself free and then I made my way back to the road." "Doc said that a young couple picked you up and brought you here." "Yes." "They were very nice." "Miss Lawson, I think you'd better call your roommate and tell her you're all right." "She's been worried sick." "Yeah." "(PHONE RINGING)" "(RINGING CONTINUES)" "No answer." "She's been waiting by that phone ever since you disappeared." "♪ ♪" "(DOOR OPENS)" "♪ ♪" "(TIRES SQUEAL)" "MANNIX:" "I think his nose was just a little broader." "And could you, uh, raise the cheekbones just a little?" "Now give him a little smile, Pete." "Smile?" "Yeah, this guy was happy with his work." "Hello, Joe." "Art." "Pete." "Hello, Lieutenant." "Did you find out anything at the house?" "Some footprints in the backyard, some tire tracks on the road." "Neither one of them very clear." "And no fingerprints." "I'd say he was a pro." "Well, maybe this will give us something to go on." "Not us." "This is my ball game, Joe." "Hey, Art, I'm the guy he shot at." "I'd like to be the one that tears up his gun permit." "You better keep your head down." "He might not miss the next time." "How's this, Joe?" "Mm... a happy hoodlum." "All right, we'll run some prints off." "You mind if I get a couple copies, Art?" "Wallet-size." "Mementos." "Okay, Pete." "MANNIX:" "Thanks." "Joe, there just has to be a connection." "Last night, a psycho drags a woman out of her car, starts to strangle her and this morning, her roommate is murdered." "There may be a connection, Art, but it wasn't the same man." "Why do you say that?" "Different MO." "One was a choker, one used a gun." "One wore a ski mask, grabbed a purse and ran." "The other left a purse and tore the joint apart looking for something else." "Mm." "I think the one I saw got what he was after." "Why do you say that?" "Why was he smiling?" "Do you know this man?" "No." "Is the one who...?" "He may be." "Poor Joanna, I..." "How horrible." "Do you know if Joanna was in any kind of trouble?" "None that I know of." "No stormy romances?" "Nobody who might have been jealous?" "Her husband was killed in a car accident a year ago." "That's when she moved in with me." "She didn't date, as far as I know." "Who could have done such a thing?" "Now, uh, let me worry about that." "You just worry about getting well, huh?" "I am getting well." "The doctors say I can go home today." "Ah, well, I'm afraid home is off-limits until they catch this joker." "We can stop by and pick up a bag for you." "I've got a place you can stay." "A producer I know is making a movie in Tahiti, so you're gonna boat-sit for him." "All the comforts of home:" "TV, shower, stove, refrigerator, telephone, and an all-day sea breeze." "Oh, and at night, or when you're below, you'd better lock the hatch from inside." "And remember, anything suspicious, just hit that phone." "(CAR PHONE BUZZING)" "Mannix." "Joe, Marty Hatch wants to see you." "Says it's important." "Well, I don't know how important it is, but it sure does explain my lousy gas mileage." "What happened?" "Just before I phoned you, I got a call from Dave." "He took the car over to Hollywood to get it checked out this morning, and Ossie Diamond..." "Ossie's my tune-up guy... he couldn't find anything wrong with it, so he put it up on the rack." "Found a bunch of tape stuck to the underside of the gas tank." "He yanked it off and what do you know?" "There's a hole as big as your little finger." "Man-made?" "Mm-hmm." "Clean and round." "Made by an awl or an ice pick, Dave figures." "How far this side of Vegas were you when you ran out of gas?" "Hundred miles or so." "A hole that size, you wouldn't have covered 20 miles." "Did you stop anyplace along the way?" "Once." "A coffee shop." "Where?" "I don't remember the name of the town, but it was about... 15 miles back." "Yeah." "Somebody punched a hole in your gas tank while you were in having your coffee, then he trailed you down the road until you ran dry." "When you hiked back to look for gas, he got rid of Cathy and taped up the hole." "Why?" "To get something out of Cathy's purse?" "That's the question." "We might have the answer if you can put a name to this face." "I think he's the one that killed Joanna." "Well, why do you think that?" "I was there." "Do you know him?" "Uh, no, I don't." "For a minute I thought, but it couldn't be." "Who?" "Tiny Cordell." "Halfback." "Plays up in Canada now." "Doesn't look anything like Cordell and you know it." "I said it wasn't him, didn't I?" "Okay, let's start over." "Do you know him?" "I told you... no." "Okay, Marty, you're paying me." "I'll find him." "(DOOR OPENS, CLOSES)" "Well, here you go, Marty." "You got wheels again." "Thanks." "What sort of a guy would stick a hole in somebody's gas tank?" "How should I know?" "Anyway, it's fixed, isn't it?" "So let's just drop the whole thing, okay?" "Okay." "You want me to fix you another drink?" "What do you mean, "another drink"?" "Since when you started counting?" "I'm sorry." "For what?" "Unnecessary roughness." "15-yard penalty." "You can march it off my backside, if you want." "Well, penalty declined." "But "sorry" part accepted." "Do me a favor, book me a plane to Vegas tonight, will you?" "You just came back." "I know." "Any flight after 7:00 will be fine." "(NO VOICE)" "MAN:" "Hey, look who's here!" "The Golden Arm!" "Hey, Marty, bet the line, babe, I'm hot." "Some other time." "But, thanks." "MAN 2:" "Seven!" "Seven the one to play!" "(BETTORS CLAMORING)" "Mickey, you seen Bud Tolan tonight?" "Not tonight." "When?" "This morning." "He should be back in a few minutes." "When he comes in, tell him I'll be at the bar." "Stick around, Dutch." "Hey." "Hello, Augie." "Scotch and soda, right?" "Yeah, with a lemon twist tonight." "Hey, Sunday... big day, huh?" "We're all rooting for you up here, especially me." "Hey, Marty, what's with you?" "You come to Vegas, you don't look up your old pals, huh?" "Ben, I thought you were in New Orleans." "Yeah." "That why you got back here so quick?" "Action's better when Ben Kessler's out of town, huh?" "Come on, you know me better than that, Ben." "Maybe you and I better have a little talk about Cathy." "You, uh... you heard about that, I guess." "Yeah, I guess I did." "All the way down in New Orleans." "You know, Marty, there's something you don't know about me." "When my friends start getting cozy with my girl the second my back is turned, that's the time I stop thinking about them as my friend." "Now, wait a minute, Ben..." "You'd like to be on hand for Marty Hatch Day, wouldn't you, friend?" "Ben, it just happened that we were going to Los Angeles at the same time." "Now, that's true." "Well, don't ever leave at the same time again." "If you do, you'll live to regret it." "If you live." "You understand?" "Yeah, I understand, Ben." "Good lad." "Now, how's everything else going, okay?" "Uh, fine, sure." "Dutch." "Congratulations on Sunday." "You've earned it all and more." "Thanks." "Marty's decided that he better hop back to Los Angeles." "Drive him out to the airport." "Ben." "Hey, Joe." "Augie." "What are you doing here?" "I came up to see Marty Hatch." "He just left." "I know." "That's why I'm sitting here having a pleasant chat with you, Augie." "Irish rocks, right?" "Tell me, uh... why would Marty Hatch fly up here from L.A., talk to Ben Kessler for roughly a minute and a half, and then fly right back again?" "I wouldn't even guess, Joe." "Augie, a couple of years ago, in a dark alley one night, you would have had your brains scrambled." "If you hadn't shown up." "I know, Joe." "I owe you." "(GROANS)" "It's payoff time, right?" "Right." "I get off in a half hour." "My relief will be here." "I'll meet you then." "Same alley?" "Same alley." "Okay, Augie, what do you know about the comings and goings of one Marty Hatch?" "Uh, he shows up every week or two." "Play big?" "Table stakes." "You think he could've gotten in too deep?" "No, I'd have heard about it." "In this town, things like that get around." "What's around about, uh, Ben Kessler's girl?" "Cathy Lawson?" "Hm." "She's a nice kid." "All his girls are." "Plays the field, huh?" "Yeah, but one at a time." "See, that's what fools them." "Soon as they get comfortable and they hear the sound of wedding bells, that's Ben's cue to give them the gate." "Let's suppose Cathy heard the gate opening and wanted to stay, had something on Kessler and threatened to spill it?" "Oops." "Then he'd find a way to clam her up for good." "You know him?" "Joe, what's this all about?" "No, never mind." "Forget it." "I don't want to know." "Who is he, Augie?" "Uh, Bud..." "Bud Tolan." "What's he do?" "He's one of Kessler's watchdogs." "Was he at the Caravan tonight?" "I didn't see him." "How about last night?" "I couldn't say." "Augie." "Honest." "I've gotta know." "I've gotta know about last night." "Now, you ask around, find out where Bud Tolan was." "Joe, I'm off-duty." "If I go back in there asking questions, the vibes are gonna go out." "Ask tomorrow." "Then call me." "All right, if I find out, does that make us even?" "It puts you ahead, Augie." "♪ ♪" "Oh, hi, Joe." "Marty, can I come in?" "Yeah, sure." "Come on." "What'll you have, Joe?" "Just the answer to a couple of questions." "Why did you go back up to Vegas last night?" "Well, I figured that Kessler might find out that I gave his girl a lift." "So you went up to plead innocent." "Seemed like a good idea." "Sorry, Marty." "Sounds good, but I'm not buying it." "Why else would I have gone there, Joe?" "Talk to Bud Tolan maybe." "It's rerun time." "Yeah, that's Tolan, I guess." "Marty, I've got to stay on the cop's side of the street or I lose my license." "Now, when I find out a client's been conning me..." "Now, wait a minute, Joe." "I wasn't sure." "I've seen Tolan maybe once, twice in my whole life." "He may have been the guy who grabbed Cathy out of your car." "Why would he have done that?" "I thought you might tell me." "No." "I've told you everything that I know." "And about Cathy." "I've called her place a dozen times, nobody answers." "What gives?" "I didn't want her staying out there alone." "I put her someplace where she'd be safe." "Well, that's a relief, anyway." "You're sure there's nothing else you can tell me about Bud Tolan?" "No." "Uh, do you mind, Joe?" "I've got signal practice in less than an hour." "Oh, you playing again?" "Coaching." "College or pro?" "Bel Air Tigers." "Nobody over 12." "Good luck, Coach." "(CAR HORN BLARING)" "Joe?" "Marty!" "What's going on?" "!" "Tell him I'm dead." "Marty, are you okay?" "!" "It's Mannix; he's been killed." "Call the police." "(TIRES SCREECHING)" "Call the police back, tell them it was a mistake." "(TIRES SCREECHING)" "WOMAN (OVER PA): ..." "Flight 152 now arriving at Gate 14." "Southeastern Airways Flight 152 now arriving at Gate 14." "Hold it right there, Tolan." "Last call for Flight 31 to Los Angeles, boarding at Gate 2." "Last call for Flight 31 to Los Angeles, boarding at Gate 2." "Down!" "Preset!" "Hut-hut!" "(KIDS CHEERING)" "That's all right, Bob, but on a short pass over the middle like that, you got to keep the ball down." "Got to keep it flat." "Okay, Coach." "All right, guys, that's it." "Uh, Dave will run a... a few plays with you and I'll see you all Monday." "See you Sunday, Coach." "Marty Hatch Day." "Whole team will be there." "Why don't you toss one, Coach?" "All right, get on out there." "Throw it to me." "I got it!" "(KIDS SHOUTING PLAYFULLY)" "Marty." "Did you catch up with that guy, Joe?" "No, he got away, but it was Bud Tolan all right." "(SIGHS)" "Well, what now?" "Well, we'll have to look in a different direction." "What direction's that?" "My secretary's been making a few phone calls." "She's a bright gal, Marty;" "really bright." "She found out a few things..." "about you, for instance." "Such as?" "That you haven't worked since you quit football two years ago." "No personal appearances, no endorsements, no TV commercials, no TV talk shows, no book telling it like it was, nothing." "I don't like that kind of hustling." "Two years and you haven't changed your lifestyle." "Big house, finest clothes, fancy foreign car, never miss an opening at Vegas." "That all takes money, Marty." "Where does it come from?" "Good investments, Joe." "Like Swiss International?" "When that boy wonder went behind bars, you dropped 180 grand." "And that was just one of your investments that went sour." "I told you I had a smart secretary." "(KIDS SHOUTING PLAYFULLY)" "Yeah." "BOY:" "See ya, Coach!" "Six months ago, you were flat broke." "Couldn't even pay your property taxes." "Well, I got lucky in Vegas, Joe." "Made a bundle." "Did you, Marty?" "Or did you go on Ben Kessler's payroll?" "Now, what does that mean?" "It means you're working for a hood." "You..." "No, Dave, Dave, Dave!" "No, talking like that..." "I'll kill him." "Look... you let me handle it." "It's okay." "Look, you pack up the gear, huh?" "Take the car home." "It's all right, Dave, it's all right." "Would you believe it, Joe... all those years he gave to the game?" "Played his heart out till he was over the hill." "And then... tried to sell used cars for awhile, couldn't hack it, and hit the skids." "I didn't come here to talk about Dave Trimble." "He's a big part of it, Joe." "A couple of years ago I was watching a game, just after my knee went bad." "I had the glasses on a young quarterback running a play out of the end zone." "I saw Dave sitting about four rows up." "There I was on the 50-yard line... and there was Dave Trimble, eight consecutive years an all-pro, and he was sitting behind the goalposts." "Well, it sort of hit me right where I live." "You know, handwriting on the wall." "I fooled around with the idea of getting a job for awhile, but... after you've been a..." "Celebrity?" "You got an image, you don't want it to change, so no job's good enough..." "not even a coaching job." "I made a pass at cutting down on expenses, but... living it up big's like being a junkie... it's tough to break the habit." "What did you do?" "Got sucked into those investments that your bright secretary found out about." "They were supposed to set me up for life." "But instead, they wiped you out." "Six months ago, I wasn't just busted, Joe..." "I was in a hole 60,000 bucks deep." "Then along came good old Ben Kessler and bailed me out." "With just a few strings attached." "I don't know why I'm telling you all of this." "You're gonna have to tell someone." "MARTY:" "The government was starting to sniff around the Kessler operation." "They were out to prove that he was skimming money at the Caravan." "I imagine he was." "To the tune of a half a million dollars a month." "Tax-free, that's nice pin money." "He had it arranged so the rip-off itself was no trouble." "The tough part was getting the money to L.A." "And off to the laundry." "And your Ferrari was the laundry truck." "I just drove the money down for Kessler." "I was tailor-made for the job:" "a Sunday hero that everyone would pat on the back and nobody would suspect." "I'd get a call and drive up to Vegas." "When I drove back, the skim money would be in a briefcase in my trunk." "No fuss... no muss... everyone cool." "Two or three weeks later, I'd get another phone call." ""Go to the movies, Marty." ""The Roxy, 8:00 p.m." ""Leave the car in the parking lot." "Enjoy the show, Marty."" "When you drove home, the money wasn't in the trunk." "After the first two or three times," "I didn't even bother to check anymore." "It was just that simple, Joe." "The night you ran out of gas... did you check then?" "Just as soon as the Highway Patrolman drove off." "And no suitcase." "Uh-uh." "That's the big reason that I kept quiet about Cathy... so Ben Kessler wouldn't start wondering about his money." "Your one chance was to find it before you got a call telling you to go to another movie." "That's still my one chance, Joe." "Kessler's not gonna believe me." "He'll just figure that I framed the whole thing in order to keep the half million." "Who else could have known about the money in your car?" "Well, the only lead I have is the one you gave me... that drawing of Bud Tolan." "That is why I went to Vegas." "Dead end." "A friend of mine called me this morning from Vegas." "The night you and Cathy drove back," "Bud Tolan never left the Caravan." "If it wasn't Tolan, you got any other ideas?" "Well, how about somebody who could've overheard a conversation or a phone call?" "Like who?" "Cathy Lawson." "Cathy?" "Why?" "If she couldn't be Mrs. Kessler, maybe she wanted a pension." "And that man in the ski mask, she could have dreamed the whole thing up so she'd be in the clear." "But Joe, she couldn't have punched a hole in the gas tank." "Now she was with me the whole time in the coffee shop." "Well, she had a roommate, didn't she..." "Joanna Gregg... who just happened to wind up dead the next day?" "Well, if Joanna was involved, why'd she call you in the first place?" "So she'd be in the clear." "My hunch is that Bud Tolan tumbled to what the girls were up to." "Came to L.A. to grab the pension for himself." "Killed Joanna, and, uh..." "found the key to the locker." "I thought the locker was empty." "Yeah, that's the whole ball game, Marty... it was." "(RINGING)" "Mr. Mannix's office." "Peggy, I'm going to see Cathy Lawson." "Call Art Malcolm and tell him to meet me there." "Mariner's Bay in the marina..." "Slip D-1400..." "a blue and white ketch called the Walkabout." "All right, Joe." "Nice." "Very nice." "♪ ♪" "♪ ♪" "MANNIX:" "That's Tolan's car." "There he goes, Joe." "♪ ♪" "Stay out of sight." "♪ ♪" "Joe!" "Just above you!" "(SIREN WAILING)" "MANNIX:" "Yeah, thanks, Art." "You'll stay there with the doc, huh?" "Yeah, I'll wait here." "Call me." "Is Marty going to be all right?" "I've seen Marty decked a half a dozen times in a game... he always gets up." "He's one of the finest men I've ever met." "Then why'd you set him up?" "Set him up?" "I'm talking about skim money, Cathy." "That pot of gold that was going to make all your dreams come true." "You think I was involved in something with Bud Tolan, is that it?" "Not by choice." "Tolan came here because he knew you had the briefcase." "What briefcase?" "The one your roommate put in that airport locker." "Tolan came here, killed Joanna and found the key." "I saw him in the house, so he wanted me dead, too." "But there's one thing he hadn't counted on." "What?" "That you had planned on double-crossing Joanna all along, so you had a second key made." "When Tolan got to the airport, the cupboard was bare." "That briefcase is here with you, isn't it, Cathy?" "In that suitcase, maybe?" "I really don't know what you're talking about." "Cathy... it'll take the police all of two minutes to find it." "Maybe another three minutes to confirm that you were booked on a flight out of the country." "Mexico, maybe?" "Joe... maybe you oughtn't to make that phone call." "Why not?" "I can give you..." "oh, say... 20,000 reasons." "You can make a better deal than that, Cathy." "How?" "You know a lot about Ben Kessler." "Open up to the police." "I'm sure the jury will go easy on you." "After all, you didn't kill anyone... you just got greedy." "(OVER TV):" "Ladies and gentlemen, this is Tom Harmon." "Today, "Marty Hatch Day,"" "brings back what is, for me, a very personal memory." "Years ago... a whole lot of years ago, I'm afraid..." "I first saw a slender high school kid cut the opposition to pieces with his great passing arm." "Since that day, I've followed Marty Hatch through college and professional football, and he has always performed like a true superstar." "It was to have been my privilege at this time to introduce Marty to you and the television audience." "Unfortunately, he can't be with us." "As you probably know, the hero of countless football games was a hero off the field yesterday, when he was critically wounded while helping to apprehend a criminal." "But we can still pay tribute to the man whose golden arm passed an expansion team into a league championship in his first year as quarterback." "Here are a few of the records that belong to Marty Hatch:" "Most passes completed in a game." "(LOWERING VOLUME):" "Most passing yards gained in a game." "Most touchdown passes in a game..." "Wait'll they find out." "Find out what, Marty?" "Ben Kessler'll be so busy trying to wriggle off that hook, your name won't even come up." "Are you sure, Joe?" "I'm sure, Marty." "HARMON (OVER TV):" "Marty, I hope you're watching this, so you'll know that you still have your fans, and we're all still rooting for you." "(FAN CHEERING) Hang in there, champ." "I know you've scored tougher touchdowns." "(BAND PLAYING LIVELY MARCH OVER TV)" "(TURNING VOLUME UP)" "(CROWD CHEERING, LIVELY MARCH PLAYING)" "(CHEERING, LIVELY MARCH CONTINUE)" "(MARCH FADES, ECHOING DISTANTLY)"