"I have no more time to sit this morning." "I must be off." "You see, I'm sketching this today." "Das Geisterschloss?" "Oh, yeah." "Magnificent, isn't it?" "I can't wait to have a go at it." "Visit everything in Salzburg but this place, you must never go to." "Why on earth not?" "I mean, warum nicht?" "Please listen, madam." "This schloss--Castle." "this is a bad place." "It is unheilig." "Unholy." "There is much evil there." "Well, I don't know much about phantoms and ghosts but I do know something about 15th-century architecture." "And this castle of yours is a treasure." "And I have a nice new pad and I am going to slip up there and do some sketching and I'll be back by tea time." "Oh, yeah." "Oh, I do appreciate your concern, my dear." "I really do." "But that's just a story." "Ah, you'll see." "I'll even make you a sketch." "Here, you!" "Here, you!" "Stop, all of you!" "Hey, where are you--?" "And it's awesome, right?" "Yeah." "It's schloss." "Das un schloss, yes?" "Mm-hm." "Oh, my gosh." "That's my very first castle." "Obviously, you see them all the time  but back home in the States, in Arlington" "Guten tag, Frau King." "Oh!" "Yes, hello." "Goodbye." "Yes." "I told him to take your bags to the hotel." "Oh, thank you very much." "Oh, this is beautiful." "Would you just look at that." "Well, this is like a fantasy land." "Sometimes I think I'm living in one too." "Did you clear everything with your family?" "Well, I followed the instructions Mr. Melrose gave me." "I told my mother that I had gotten that new job with iff which is true, because iff is the agency's cover." "And then I told her that iff was sending me to Salzburg." "Which is also absolutely true." "So far no lying." "Right." "So everything is fine." "Well, no, not exactly." "I told her that I was going on a location scout for a documentary." "What's wrong with that?" "Perfect cover." "But it's not the truth, Lee." "And I don't wanna lie to my mother anymore." "Okay, Amanda." "Look, you see that little church over there?" "Yes?" "It's a great location, isn't it?" "Huh?" "The statue here, isn't that terrific?" "Yes." "Well, so there." "We've scouted locations, okay?" "Okay." "Ha." "Why did you send for me?" "I didn't send for you." "Emily Farnsworth did." "Mrs. Farnsworth?" "Oh...." "You don't mean that nice Englishwoman I showed around Washington last year." "Two days ago, I got a coded message from her to meet her here in Salzburg." "Excuse me, did you say a coded message?" "Emily is a British agent." "One of the best field operatives Ml6 has got." "Mrs." "Farnsworth is a spy?" "Mm-hm." "Oh." "Well, I wonder why you didn't tell me that last summer when l" "Because on a need-to-know basis, I didn't need to know." "Right." "And now you need to know." "Yes." "So why don't we--?" "Why don't we find a place a little less crowded, huh?" "Sure." "I arrived yesterday for our meeting." "At Emily's hotel, the clerk said she had called them asked them to pack up her things and hold them, she was going to Vienna." "Would she do that?" "Not without a message to me." "She sent for me, remember?" "Right." "British intelligence has lost contact too." "She's been missing for two days." "I don't know." "I think she got too close to something on her own." "She was always a little too gutsy." "Wait, too close to what?" "For the past months, an electronic listening post somewhere has been picking up classified information from embassies all over Europe and transmitting it to the other side of the lron Curtain." "We've been hit hard." "We have?" "England, France, Germany." "Everybody." "Uncovering that listening post and plugging those leaks is top priority." "Emily must have found something." "But why did she send for me?" "Well, the message at the hotel was to be passed to her niece from America Amanda King." "Her niece?" "Emily Farnsworth is smart, very smart." "That message was to tell us something you two did in Washington is important to whatever she found." "What we did in Washington?" "Yeah." "Gosh, you know, we did an awful lot." "We'll go over whatever you did together step by step until we figure it out." "How much time do we have?" "Top-secret NATO-deployment sessions begin day after tomorrow in Brussels." "The airwaves will be loaded with information transmitted between embassies" "If that information is intercepted five years of military strategy goes right down the drain." "You mean, Mrs. Farnsworth was looking for the listening post then, right?" "Yeah." "I'm afraid she got caught." "I'd give anything to know where she is right now." "I know you're lying." "I have told you for the past two days that I'm a British subject touring the Continent." "A tourist?" "Yes." "I see." "A tourist who just happens, in the last month to have visited every city in Europe where we have a listening post." "Who happens to come to Geisterschloss, where we have our headquarters." "Who happens to receive NATO briefings from the American embassy in Bonn." "Now, that wasn't a wild guess, Mrs. Farnsworth." "We've built up quite a dossier on you in the last two days." "Would you like to hear how I know?" "Dietrich." "Deployment talks are scheduled in Brussels on the 18th." "At these sessions, each individual missile site is to be considered" "There's much more if you care to listen." "Go to hell, Dr. McCarran." "No, it's you that's likely to be making that trip, love." "Well, why don't you do it and get it over with?" "All in good time." "We're running a multimillion-dollar operation here and nothing is going to upset it." "I intend for it to go on for a very long time." "Oh, yes, your booming business of selling the security of the free world and the security of your own country." "You should know what a lifetime of service to Her Majesty's government brings." "A pathetic pension." "Well, not for me." "No, I'll take mine now, thank you." "I'll take as much as I can as fast as I can and grow old happily spending my fortune." "Take care, doctor." "A great many questions are asked if an agent disappears." "Questions from someone like that niece of yours, Amanda King." "She is only a tourist." "Very clever of you to slip her that message when we had you telephone your hotel." "But I don't think you did her any favors." "If she's a tourist and simply part of your cover then she will unfortunately lose her poor auntie." "Never see her again." "But if she's an agent and we will find out, she's being followed even now." "If she's an agent...." "What else did you see with Emily?" "The White House." "Everybody sees that." "I don't think there's a connection" "The Washington Monument." "You've tour-bussed us through the Capitol." "We had lunch in Lafayette Park." "Tuna fish and carrot sticks." "No, no." "I've got it." "I showed her the Watergate." "They solved that one." "Right." "It's okay, just give me a minute to think, huh?" "Ha, it is wonderful, isn't it?" "Oh, yes." "That puppet show's been performed continuously in Salzburg for over 300 years." "Oh, well, my boys would love it." "Yes, I am certain they would." "I came here to this country when I was a boy." "Never got it out of my blood." "I holiday here every year from London." "Bit of an Austriophile." "Well, I guess I can certainly see why." "You've been here before?" "No, this is my first time." "Oh, what pleasure awaits you." "I am Dr. Edwin Hanover." "Oh, how do you do, doctor?" "I'm Amanda King." "Do you know, you can share that puppet show with those boys of yours." "They sell postcards of the puppets." "Postcards?" "Yes." "You have them in America." "Oh, yes, postcards." "Yes, sir." "Thank you, doctor, thank you so much." "Lee." "Amanda, what--?" "I figured out what Mrs. Farnsworth was trying to tell me." "I mean, tell you." "Tell you through me." "Scares me to admit it, but I think I followed that." "What?" "Now, listen." "I don't think it's so much where we went as what we did when we got there." "You see, Mrs. Farnsworth is an artist." "She sketched everything she saw." "She did?" "Yes, of course." "The Washington Monument..." "...the bridge, Capitol, Watergate." "I remember the tour." "This could be something." "There should be a sketch pad with her things in the hotel." "Let's go through her bags." "No." "Why?" "Oh, that wouldn't be polite." "It's all right." "You're her niece, aren't you?" "Oh, Amanda, I can't figure them out." "I've been poring over these sketches." "It's just pictures of attractions in Salzburg." "Well, maybe it's something in the paper or with the pencil or something." "I wish you'd stop reading spy novels-- -lt could be." "It's possible." "No, no, no." "Look, if there's anything here, it's within the sketches themselves." "Emily used to say when you've looked and looked and can't find anything..." "...that's the time to look again." "You know her pretty well." "I worked with Emily on my first assignment in this business." "Your first assignment was with a British agent?" "Mm-hm." "Ever hear of interagency cooperation?" "Yeah." "Yeah, I was pretty brash as a rookie." "I couldn't wait to rush in and get the gun out." "Emily pulled me through some tight spots, though." "She taught me patience, control." "Patience and control." "She's my friend." "In a business that doesn't have many." "She's a friend." "Don't you worry." "We'll find her and she'll be all right." "Yeah." "Amanda, this is a sketch of this cafe, right?" "Oh, yeah, absolutely." "Look at the waitress in this picture." "Yeah?" "That's her." "You think so?" "Do you speak English?" "Yes, a little." "Good, good." "We're looking for someone." "May we ask you some questions?" "Yeah." "We're interested in locating an Englishwoman who was here recently." "She's of medium height, medium weight, brown hair." "Her name's Farnsworth." "I know of no such woman." "Of course you do." "She sketched this cafe." "You're in it." "She must've spoken to you." "You must be wrong." "I don't think such woman was here." "Ah." "Perhaps this will help" "No woman." "Look, Marianna--No, Marianna" "Damn it." "If there was ever anyone hiding something, it's that woman." "You pressured her." "Pressured?" "It's called questioning." "Okay." "Come on, let's go." "lt will blow away." "Oh, Hello, Dr. Hanover." "I'm telling you, Marianna knows" "Imagine bumping into you again." "Amanda." "Lee." "This is Dr. Hanover." "Dr. Hanover, this is Lee Stetson." "Yes." "How do you do?" "How do you do?" "Amanda, we really do have to be going." "I know." "Aren't these drawings lovely?" "Yours, Amanda?" "May I call you Amanda?" "Oh, yes, please do." "No, actually those drawings were done by a friend of mine." "Actually, they were done by my aunt." "Yeah." "We're very friendly." "Ah." "My aunt and I." "At any rate, she seems to have disap" "Disappointed us by leaving town." "Disappointed us by leaving" "Yes, she just seems to have dashed off to Vienna." "Ah, Vienna, the Europe of last century." "Such elegance and romance." "Yes, one would dash off to Vienna." "Perhaps you two will be following your aunt there." "For a young couple, it is a city of dreams." "Oh, no, sir, we're not a couple." "We're together, but we're not a couple." "I mean, we're friends." "We're just a couple of friends." "Uh, Dr. Hanover, do you mind?" "Oh, yeah." "Well, I guess we're off?" "Where are we off to again?" "Uh, Sightseeing." "We're going sightseeing because these places that my aunt has drawn look so lovely." "We just want to see them for ourselves." "Yes, and well worth the effort." "The Residenzplatz, the Lake Castle." "Well, you should have a lovely day." "And then there's the Mirabell Castle and garden." "They're just near here." "Oh, allow me to walk with you." "Boy." "lt is a beautiful place." "One of the most beautiful in the world, I think." "Exquisite, isn't it?" "Mm, yes." "The Mirabell Castle and garden was originally laid out in 1606." "Then it was rebuilt in 1721 and again rebuilt after a fire in 1818." "Your aunt has done it more than justice." "I must say goodbye now, or rather auf wiedersehen." "Auf wiedersehen." "Goodbye." "What a lovely man." "What's the matter?" "Nothing, nothing." "Here, let me see the sketch." "Sure." "I don't know, Amanda." "What is she trying to tell us, huh?" "That's funny." "What's funny?" "I don't know." "You're making my day." "Look, there's something wrong with this one statue." "There's something wrong with the legs." "What?" "Ah, I got it." "Got what?" "What?" "You know how Mrs. Farnsworth taught you that after you've looked you have to look again?" "Yes, yes." "Amanda, look, if you're going someplace with this please get to the point." "Every month Phillip and Jamie get a boys' magazine." "In each issue there is a picture that has things hidden in it." "So?" "So that's what Mrs. Farnsworth is doing." "She's hidden something in every sketch." "And in this one, I think it's a...." "Jackhammer." "Jackhammer." "Maybe it's not a jackhammer." "It could be a lawn mower." "It's not a lawn mower, but it's definitely something." "Yeah, come on." "No, no." "Wait." "I've got it." "Come on." "I've got it." "It's the letter T." "Great." "It's the letter T." "Yeah." "Uh, are there any more sketches?" "Come on." "Uh, yeah." "There's a giant pretzel stand." "Yeah, I know exactly where that is." "Okay." "The horses." "Here is the pretzel stand." "And do you see what she's done?" "Look." "See all the pretzels on the stand?" "Yeah." "There's only one in this picture." "It looks like an O." "See?" "We're being followed." "We are?" "Mm-hm." "Keep it casual." "Standing over there with a green jacket." "I saw him this morning at the gardens." "Now here." "You mean he's been with us all day?" "Two days." "Two days?" "I spotted him yesterday at the puppet show." "Well, they're all tourist attractions, are you really sure?" "Mm-hm." "I'm gonna make sure." "Come on." "I think I found another letter." "It's an S." "All right, hold it." "Sprechen sie English?" "Then turn around." "You're making a grave mistake." "You're the one making the mistake." "Don't make another one." "If you would allow." "I believe this is the way you do it." "Amanda, I want you to meet Colonel Gerhard Metzger Austrian intelligence." "You and Mr. Stetson are showing a great interest in Emily Farnsworth." "I had to determine the nature of that interest." "She asked you to meet her here two days ago?" "Yes." "And like you, I was told she had left for Vienna." "What I really don't understand, Frau King, is why she wanted you here." "I don't know." "I" "I think maybe it's because she hoped that I would remember her sketching and then we would find the clues..." "...that she left in them." "Clues?" "Oh, yes." "You see, in each sketch, we found a letter." "See this sketch of the gardens?" "That's a T." "O at the pretzel stand." "Yeah." "Fountain with the horses." "See that little tiny S?" "Wait." "You didn't tell me you found another letter." "I tried, but you didn't hear me." "See, she's spelling something out." "Doesn't mean anything now but when we get all the letters, I think it might tell us something." "Yeah, that's an S." "Right there in the horse's mane." "Yeah." "How many of these sketches are there?" "There's this next one of the cafe then there's this house." "That's Mozart's house." "Mm-hm." "And I think that's an H." "Then there's this castle in the lake." "Do you know where that is?" "Yes, that's outside of town." "Very isolated spot." "I can't find anything in this one." "It's all just straight up and down lines." "If Frau Farnsworth drew it, it must have some significance." "I think we ought to have a look at it." "I'll meet you there." "I will ask questions of the local police." "Might have information on the owner." "Something of value." "Shall we say half an hour?" "Half an hour, you got it." "Let's go." "You think Colonel Metzger is already there?" "Yeah, probably." "I don't why he didn't wait for us." "We're not that late." "Maybe only 10 minutes, 15 at the most." "He knows we're new here." "I wasn't lost." "I didn't say you were lost." "Well, that man in town, he gave me lousy directions, you know that." "Okay, now go to the left." "To the left." "No, no, my left." "My left." "Now--I am." "Just give" "More to the right." "Will you give me--?" "Little more to the--I'm sorry." "How am I doing?" "Straight shot." "That did it." "All right." "Easy." "Watch your step." "Now, just stay right here." "Right." "I'm gonna take a look around." "Come on." "Just like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." "What?" "!" "Well at least we're all right." "We got away, huh?" "Yeah, and that's all we've got." "Those two goons turned us into a high-diving act." "And I don't know who they are or why they were waiting." "No, we got our clues." "We got a T, an H, an O, and an S. We got 'thos.'" "'Thos'?" "Yeah." "No--That doesn't mean anything." "Well, maybe if we rearrange the letters then we would have 'hot.'" "Or we would have 'shot.'" "Take it easy, will you?" "It also spells 'host.'" "No, it's--It's gotta be some kind of German word." "Trouble is, time is running out." "You mean for Mrs. Farnsworth?" "For everybody." "Brussels talks take place in less than 24 hours and we don't have a hell of a lot to go on, you know?" "The one thing we haven't done is go over the sketch at the cafe." "Yeah, that cafe." "I'd like to get some straight answers from Marianna." "Hey, Amanda, that waitress." "In all the sketches, there's only one person." "She's trying to tell us that that waitress is important." "Yeah, come on." "Come on." "Damn it, it's closed." "We can come back first thing in the morning." "Count on it." "I've got a lot of questions to ask." "Like where is Emily?" "You should be more careful, Colonel Metzger when roaming around castles." "You could hurt yourself." "We know that your alleged niece and her companion are American agents." "Not many tourists carry pistols, are trained in hand-to-hand combat and keep company with known intelligence officers." "Awkward." "Damned awkward." "You and this gentleman have complicated our simple business." "Well, I wish we could bloody well shut you down." "Frankly, I'm rather surprised you've even found us." "McCarran rigged this place with stealth equipment making our electronic operation impossible to detect with radar." "Not bad, McCarran." "Perfect place for your eavesdropping operation." "I had run across the Geisterschloss years ago." "It was ideal." "Elevated, deserted." "And with that delicious legend to keep the locals at bay." "And long-range microwave technique." "It's taken me years of dogged research to perfect it, you know." "You'll be found by others just as we found you." "By the way, Mrs. Farnsworth, how did you manage to pinpoint us?" "Just a bit of dogged research on my part." "And now you find yourself captive, huh?" "Doctor?" "We have a British and an Austrian agent here." "Two Americans in town." "You suppose the French, Germans, Italians can be far behind?" "It's time to cut our losses, move on." "What are you saying?" "Don't be coy, doctor." "You're a clever man." "Work it out." "We can't take them with us." "And we certainly can't let them go." "Now, look here, McCarran, I didn't get into this to become a murderer." "You see to it." "No." "You're not gonna walk away washing your hands." "You entered into our partnership freely." "This is going to be a joint decision." "Now, what do we do with them?" "They must be killed." "I'm sorry, I didn't hear you." "Kill them." "Both of them." "The Americans too, if necessary." "Kill them all." "All right, when the hell does this place open anyhow?" "I don't know." "I" "Ah, there it is." "There it is." "What?" "It's a letter G, all right." "Look, there's only one word I know of spelled with five letters that we've got." "'Ghost.' What does it mean?" "I'll bet anything that Marianna knows." "Come on." "Locked?" "Yeah." "Open." "Yeah." "Hello?" "Anybody here?" "Amanda, she's been shot." "Oh, God." "Marianna?" "Marianna?" "Don't worry, we'll-- We'll get help for you." "Your friend." "Mrs. Farnsworth." "I tell her don't go." "Ghost castle." "Geisterschloss." "Amanda, there's-- There's nothing we can do." "Hey." "Hey." "You all right?" "Why did they kill her?" "Because she knew what happened to Emily." "Damn it, if we don't find her...." "Come on." "Shouldn't we call the police?" "Yeah." "Yeah." "Look, I'll take care of it." "You all right?" "Mm-hm." "Hold it." "There's someone who can tell us where this castle is." "I thought you didn't trust him." "I don't." "Hello, Dr. Hanover." "Ah, Amanda, Mr. Stetson, how nice to see you." "Amanda, a piece of real edelweiss." "Oh, right." "Thank you, sir." "Dr. Hanover, you" "You seem to know this area well." "A fair statement." "Where is the ghost castle?" "Ghost castle, you say?" "Well, most castles in this area have some such tale associated with them." "Local folks are fond of legends and the like." "Do you know a specific castle near Salzburg that the people call Das Geisterschloss?" "No." "I'm sorry." "Why don't you just hop in your car and drive up to the Hohensalzburg?" "Must be an army of old boys up there rattling chains and walking through walls." "Yeah." "Uh, Dr. Hanover is right, Amanda." "Sure." "We'll try that." "That's the idea." "I must run, I'm afraid." "Good luck with your ghost hunt." "Come on." "He's lying." "He sure was." "Obvious, wasn't it?" "Noticed the nervous hand movement avoidance of eye contact, higher-pitched voice?" "No, I just noticed this is the first time he didn't know everything about Salzburg." "Yeah." "There was that too." "Come on, come on." "We'll follow him." "I'm in, I'm in, I'm." "I'm in." "Get in." "Lee." "No." "You don't know what I'll say." "I know what you'll say." "I don't wanna hear it." "I don't know what's going on up there and I don't have time to worry about you." "Mrs. Farnsworth sent for me." "Stay in the car." "Lee  I'm the one who remembered the sketches and figured out the clues." "Stay in the car, please." "She's my friend too and I could be able to help." "Lee, I don't know what's happened to Mrs. Farnsworth but I do know what happened to Marianna." "And if I wait in the car, the same thing could happen to me too." "All right, but promise me you will take off at the first sign of trouble." "And you listen to everything that I say." "I always do." "Oh." "Thank you." "Yeah, yeah, yeah." "Where did Dr. Hanover go?" "Where we're going." "Inside." "This is what you get when you don't wait in the car." "I didn't say anything." "Okay, you just--Just stay close to me." "All right." "Amanda" "Close  but not that close." "We've been expecting you." "They don't build them like they used to." "Oh, Mrs. Farnsworth." "Well, thank goodness you're all right." "Not quite, but still alive." "Amanda, Mr. Stetson, I'd like to say you're welcome but, well, you understand." "This saddens me very much." "When Heinemann told me that you and Mr. Stetson..." "...were coming up, I was very upset." "Let's get on with it." "The briefing's almost over, still those tapes to pack." "Then you have information on the missile deployment talks." "Invaluable information." "But I'm afraid this will have to be our swan song here." "You have shown us that it's time for us to move on and set up elsewhere." "We may be able to pack up completely." "Those NATO tapes will be worth a fortune." "This is very regrettable, but it is necessary." "You do understand, I hope." "Oh, yeah." "Yeah, I understand." "Your scientific skills, your government don't mean a thing to you, do they?" "It all comes down to pure greed." "I prefer to look upon it as entrepreneurial spirit." "Nearly 50 years of service, brilliant work." "Had he not met me, do you know what he would've received?" "A few ridiculous letters tacked after his name." "I'm afraid we're going to have to eliminate you." "Or to put it better let gravity do it, and the ravages of time." "Oh, my gosh." "We're not going to die like Marianna, I gather." "No bullets for us." "She got in the way." "She had to die." "As you all must." "It's ready." "This device contains a little high explosive that will go off in a few minutes sending tons of this old castle's rock and granite down on top of you." "I doubt if your bodies will ever be discovered." "Oh." "The tapes, doctor." "We still have packing to do." "Right." "I have nothing else to say, I suppose, but farewell." "Amanda, untie them." "Quickly." "I'm fine." "Oh, thank you, dear." "It's 90 seconds." "Here, take it." "Oh!" "Well done, Amanda." "Now, let's put it over there." "Easy, easy." "All right." "Come here." "Here." "Easy." "All right." "We can't get out this way." "You'd need dynamite to open this huge thing." "Well done again, Amanda." "Do you think you can pull it off, Lee?" "I'd say it was worth a try." "lf we open it up, it may blow." "We don't have much choice, do we?" "We have to take some of the charge out of it." "Everybody get back behind the chest over there." "You too, Amanda." "Already here." "I need a screwdriver." "A screwdriver." "Emily, you still wearing those wire rims?" "Right here." "It's dynamite all right." "Colonel get rid of these." "Problem solved, doctor." "Let's get out of here!" "Be careful with these boxes." "When you've finished loading, take the autobahn back to Salzburg." "Let's move quickly." "It won't be long before they're missed." "All right, Emily." "You and Metzger take out Hanover and McCarran." "My pleasure." "Soon as this starts, you head for the car." "Right." "I'm gonna take out the two heavyweights." "Give me a little head start." "Yeah." "Right-o." "Get on with it, McCarran." "My, my, my, I hope I'm not intruding." "Good catch, Amanda." "Danke sch--I mean, thank you." "Well, I play ball with my boys a lot." "Good show, Scarecrow." "Well, what can I say?" "I had a good teacher." "Oh, nothing at all." "And a very able assistant." "Well, it's nothing any good niece wouldn't do for her favorite aunt." "Emily, you never cease to amaze me." "A case like this comes along and you shine like you always have." "Remember what I've always told you, Lee." "You don't have to run rings around the enemy as long as you can think rings around him." "Well, you certainly did that." "And you remembered my sketching." "Uh-huh." "Oh, no bitte." "Better not." "I think a toast is in order." "To Colonel Metzger and our Austrian friends..." "...and the ghost castle of Salzburg." "Das Geisterschloss." "And us." "Oh, I almost forgot." "A little memento of your trip." "Oh...." "Personalized." "Emily." "Ha, ha." "Look." "Look." "That is--That's an A." "That's an A in the tree." "No, no, no." "lsn't that an L?" "That's a G." "An L. It's an L." "There's a G." "That's not an L." "No, no." "No, that's an N. Is it King?" "Gosh."