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[ Gasping ]
[ Cellphone rings ]
JACK: [ Sighs ]
Hello? Jack Driscoll.
What sort of trouble?
Where is this?
Okay. Who am I talking to?
Hello?
Hello?
***!
Daniel!
[ Grunting ]
Try his mobile.
He'll be here.
Go on. You've got his number.
No, we should wait. It was Daniel's idea.
Give him another 10 minutes.
Five, and then I'm off.
[ Knock on door ]
ANDY: Yes! What did I say?
It's Daniel. Let him in.
Well, this is a cozy little setup on a cold, dark night.
Andy.
Liam.
Anna. How are you, Anna?
I'm good, thank you, Garda Colvin.
FINBARR: That's good.
And your mother and your father? Are they good, too?
They are. Thank you.
So we're all good.
And Cathal here is our host for the evening.
Is that what they call five-card stud you're playing there?
Actually, we were just leaving, Garda Colvin.
Oh, yeah, well, I got the impression
that you were expecting someone else.
No. I don't think he'll be coming now.
It's too late.
Well, I'll tell you what,
why don't you deal me in so,
seeing as there's a spare place at the table?
And I think I'll have my usual, please, Cathal.
Well, it'll have to be on the house, then.
We're supposed to be closed.
Oh, yes. I forgot that.
So, who's dealing, then, lads?
JACK: Finbarr,
I'm on my way to get an I.D. on the drowned man.
You find out who owns the holiday cottage
overlooking the bay.
Skerig I think it's called.
Finbarr, turn your mobile on.
[ Beeping ]
[ Telephone rings ]
GardaĆ.
Eugene, what's the story?
MAN: Talks are due to resume next week.
A look at the business pages now,
and it's the long-expected deal
between Eddie McCann's Premium Holdings
and Chinese Investment Bank
that's making all the headlines.
-[ Doorbell rings ] -If you follow the markets,
you'll know that Premium Holdings
has been one of the great Irish success stories
of recent years...
-MAURA: Mrs. Driscoll? -EITHNE: Yes.
MAURA: I'm Maura Dooley.
I'm a friend of Jack's from Dublin.
He might have mentioned me.
EITHNE: He did mention you, Maura. Come in.
That's awhile ago, isn't it,
since yourself and Jack were friends?
That's right.
Yeah, when he was still stationed in Dublin.
I'm over here on holiday for a day or two.
I thought it would be nice...
He'll be thrilled to see you.
He's not here, though?
He was called out somewhere last night.
I'm expecting him any minute for his breakfast.
He'll not be long.
So, you're Maura Dooley.
Well, it's nice to meet you, Maura, at last.
Will we have some money on this hole, boys?
FINBARR: On my wages?
Oh, come on.
Wouldn't that make it more interesting?
I wouldn't like to take your money, Denis.
Not if your luck's as bad as your son's.
Liam?
Did you know he's playing poker after hours in Mallon's Bar?
And losing, too, by the sound of it.
How much this time?
You'll have to ask him.
But you'd think these kids were made of money
the way they carry on these days.
NOLAN: What can you do?
They need a car living in a place like this.
They have to be fed and clothed.
Anyway, he'll be wasting his own money before too long.
I told him, if you think I'm tough on you,
wait till you get your own boss.
Good man.
Speaking of bosses,
I saw your's last night out near the beach.
-Is that right? -Yeah.
I was dropping a friend off, you know,
and he came driving along, his lights flashing and blazing.
Nearly had me off the road.
Yeah, there was a fatality, I think.
Someone drowned.
Do you know who?
No.
Probably some foreigner off one of those Spanish factory ships,
stealing all our bloody fish.
That'll be it.
EITHNE: Well, it's not supposed to happen, as you know,
taking over from your father.
A few strings had to be pulled there,
but Gerry was proud of him and so was I.
Having a husband and a son that people would look up to.
He was a good-looking man, too.
The whole set of him.
The way he walks.
It's Gerry every time Jack comes into the room.
It's been a great loss to you.
He was no age, you know,
and as fit as a fiddle.
You're lucky you still have Jack.
I still have Jack.
You don't have any children yourself, Maura, no?
No. Fortunately.
I mean, now I'm divorced, I'm glad we didn't.
And you've left your job in the guards?
That's a shame. Was that for the same reason?
My husband was in another part of the city.
It's a small world.
I'd have forever been running into him.
And your friend? The one you're over here with?
He's just a friend.
JACK: Hello?
EITHNE: I'm in the kitchen.
God Almighty, where have you been?
These are soaking wet.
JACK: You know Brede and Ciaran O'Malley's son, Daniel?
He's drowned.
EITHNE: Dear God, no.
How?
I wish I knew.
They'll be in pieces, the pair of them.
She worships that boy.
JACK: I could see that.
EITHNE: And you might have been drowned yourself,
going into the water like that,
taking those risks.
Well, it made no difference in the end.
I couldn't save him.
MAURA: Hello, Jack.
Maura.
I'm sorry. This is a really bad...
No, no, you're grand. I just wasn't expecting...
It's great to see you.
EITHNE: I'm afraid I've been boring her
with old photos and stories.
Not at all, sure.
Jack never showed me any pictures.
But like I said, this is a really bad...
No, stay.
I'm sure Maura can make herself at home.
Look, I have a meeting that I have to get to.
You have a shower or a bath.
Make sure he has something to eat.
I'll try.
You should have that shower.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'll do that.
[ Water running ]
You've put on a bit of weight.
It shows, then?
Just a little bit.
Just around here.
Give me the towel.
Come on.
You'd think we'd be fit living in the country.
Nobody walks anywhere.
You're probably fitter living in the city.
Do you miss being in Dublin?
Sometimes.
Your mother told me to make you something to eat.
Then you'd better do it.
Well, she said they were just friends,
but you only have to see them together
to know they were more than that.
Thanks, Cathal.
The one that's come really good for us is Premium Holdings.
It's all over the news this morning,
so we have a great chance there as long as we hold our nerve.
Look at the figures from that last quarter there.
CATHAL: It's only a mug's game, Mrs. Driscoll.
Shares go down as well as up. It's only gambling in the end.
Well, I know you have to have a bit of luck,
but you must study the form to make money at stocks and shares.
I think you're better off doing the lottery or something.
At our age? Is that what you were going to say?
[ Laughter ]
Have you played poker?
Poker. Would you listen to him?
Why would I want to do that?
You have the face for it, Mrs. Driscoll, you know.
[ Laughs ]
I can imagine the sort of riffraff you get involved with
in a game like that.
No, they're a decent bunch.
Liam Nolan, do you know him? His father's a solicitor.
Oh, a solicitor. That'll make all the difference.
And Daniel O'Malley. He's a good lad.
What, do you know him?
No one's told you?
Daniel's dead.
He was drowned last night.
Where?
In the bay out there.
Jack went in after him, but it was no use.
When he got him out of the water, he was gone.
JACK: So you're a free woman again.
I am.
I chucked his ring into the Liffey.
Well, that's what he threatened to do to me
when he found out about you.
JACK: Yeah, you should never have married him.
No.
Punching him wasn't too clever either.
No, but it felt good.
I'm surprised I hadn't heard that you'd left the guards.
What are you up to now?
Just temporary stuff.
Bits and pieces, you know.
Nothing permanent.
JACK: You should have called me.
I'd already messed up your life once.
JACK: Who's this friend you're on holidays with?
It's just someone I work with.
Your mother mentioned you met someone.
A doctor.
Maggie.
MAURA: Hmm.
Attractive? Sexy?
Yeah.
Sexier than me?
JACK: She went back to England.
It's beautiful here, but it's not an easy place to settle.
MAURA: Many are tempted?
Not many make it past the winter.
Where are you staying?
Somewhere Michael booked.
He kind of knows the area.
So, tell me about this young lad who drowned.
Daniel O'Malley?
He's local.
Father has a fishing boat.
Decent people. Hardworking.
How did he come to be in the sea?
JACK: Oh, God knows.
He told his parents he was going out to play poker,
and the next thing they know,
I'm standing at the door telling them he's been drowned.
So, what is it, then, a gambling debt or suicide?
The poker, you mean?
Still thinking like a detective.
It's a hard habit to break.
It's possible, I suppose.
And what about witnesses?
Well, the woman who rang me must have seen something,
but she didn't leave a name.
Still, it's a small community.
Not much stays hidden for long.
Not if you know who to ask.
Thank God you're okay.
It's tough out here.
Different.
Lonely?
Are you going to be around long enough
for me to buy you a drink?
That's if your friend doesn't mind.
Do you still have my number?
JACK: It's in the memory there somewhere.
Then give me a call.
[ Indistinct conversation ]
[ Dog barking ]
Eugene, how are you?
Finbarr, how are you?
So, you've lost a boat, then, have you?
Aye. The small dory.
It was tied up here secure when we left it last night.
And could it have broken loose and drifted off?
No. It wasn't in the water.
It was up here by the sheds.
The outboard's gone as well.
So, stolen, then, yeah?
Well, that's the way it looks to me.
Ciaran not about yet?
No, he has his phone turned off.
That's why I thought I'd better get on to you.
Right.
Okay.
Jack.
Where were you in the middle of last night?
Well, I noticed there were lights on in Mallon's,
so I dropped in to have a look.
Which would be why you couldn't answer your mobile, I suppose.
Did the poker players tell you
Daniel O'Malley was supposed to be in there?
FINBARR: They were expecting someone.
I didn't know it was Daniel. Why?
It was Daniel who drowned last night.
So it would have been his hand you were playing
if you'd been playing.
Daniel O'Malley?
Good God.
Was there much money involved?
No.
Pocket money, that's all.
Poor kid.
I remember him helping around the pier
during the summer holidays.
Yeah.
17 years old.
FINBARR: Well, that explains one thing anyhow.
You know Eugene? He works for Ciaran.
He phoned me this morning
to say the little dory they have --
the one that they use as a tender --
disappeared last night.
He must have been fishing.
At night? No life jacket?
There's a lot of fishermen don't like wearing life jackets.
Daniel wasn't a fisherman.
His mother said they couldn't get him interested in it,
so he's hardly likely to be out hauling nets
in the middle of the night, is he?
FINBARR: God knows what's running around
in these kids' heads.
Sure, it's like talking with aliens with them
most of the time.
I passed Denis Nolan on my way out there.
I know you did.
I've just played a round with him.
And he mentioned seeing me?
FINBARR: Oh, yeah. [ Chuckles ]
Said you nearly had him off the road.
Keen to tell me he was dropping a friend home.
Wanted to know what was the hurry with you.
Is this a regular round you have with Nolan?
You must be joking.
I can't abide the man.
That's why it was a pleasure to take 50 Euro off him
for one hole.
Shame we can't get a result in court like that
now and again, huh?
Did you get that message about the cottage, Skerig?
Yeah. I'm onto it now.
JACK: Okay.
I'll catch you later.
Righto.
-Give me a moment. -Sure.
This better be quick, Sergeant.
I've another case due on.
Last night, I passed you near the beach.
You did. You nearly had me in the ditch.
Can you tell me what you were doing out there?
Didn't Finbarr tell you?
I was dropping a friend off home.
He'd had a few glasses,
and I didn't want him taking any risks by driving.
I've seen the consequences of that in here every day.
Did you notice any activity out there?
Lights on the beach? Anything like that?
You know, I must have been on autopilot.
I'm assuming all these questions
are in connection with the young man who drowned?
Daniel O'Malley. His father has a fishing boat.
I think my son knew him.
MAN: Mr. Nolan?
-Oh, thank you. -Here you go.
Was it a fishing accident?
I expect it was something like that.
Tragic.
You wouldn't happen to have
the name of that friend of yours handy, would you?
He's a client, Sergeant.
But he would be able to verify that you were driving him home?
If you had good reason to ask him to.
ANNA: Everyone just turned up.
We didn't know what else to do.
It was Sergeant Driscoll here who went in after Daniel.
JACK: You all knew him.
What sort of mood had he been in lately?
Normal. Happy.
Always nice to everyone.
He'd been quite moody, though.
Not to me.
A bit low.
Depressed?
Well, quieter than usual.
You think he might have killed himself?
I'm just trying to get a sense
of what was going on in his life.
Did he have a girlfriend? Were they getting on?
ANNA: No one special.
But Daniel wouldn't do something like this.
It wasn't in his nature.
He had a big row with his dad.
JACK: When?
A few weeks back.
-What was that about? -They weren't getting on.
[ Door closes ]
But sure, that's normal, isn't it?
Thanks.
Jack Driscoll.
Garda Sergeant Driscoll.
Michael Casey.
MAURA: Who is it?
You've met Maura.
What can we do for you, Sergeant?
Can I come in?
Sure.
We're a bit disorganized, but come in.
That's a great view.
It's a grand spot, isn't it?
You're enjoying your holiday?
CASEY: Very much.
JACK: Maura told you what happened?
Yeah.
I can't believe someone was drowning while we were asleep.
You didn't hear anything, see anything?
Lights on the beach?
You know, we can't seem to stay awake here, can we?
It must be the sea air.
You didn't hear any vehicles?
Not a sound.
We knew nothing about this.
Well, not till you told Maura.
It's just that I got a call, you see,
to say that someone was in trouble.
A woman's voice.
She wouldn't leave her name.
Right.
What do you do, Michael?
I work with Maura. Sales.
It's pretty boring sort of ***,
but we have a laugh, don't we?
JACK: And you're interested in bird-watching?
I'm getting into it. Cormorants and stuff.
Obviously, if we do hear of anything, we'll call you.
Obviously.
Maura has my number.
I suppose this happens out here quite a lot.
Get pissed,
go for a midnight swim,
find yourself out of your depth.
Usually, it's only the visitors who do that.
Locals tend to know where it's safe.
Don't forget that drink, Maura?
MAURA: No.
[ Door closes ]
What?
The point of going to see him was to find out
whether he was going to cause us a problem here.
Yeah, which is what I did.
You also seem to have given him the impression
you're available for a cozy bloody reunion.
-And maybe some extras. -Meaning?
Oh, you didn't see his tongue hanging out?
I went to see him.
I tried to find out how much he knew.
This whole thing is about to go *** upwards!
You tell me you know the local guard.
I say, fine, let's use that.
Find out how he's going to handle this.
I didn't say, "Give him the impression
you're up for a ***!"
MAURA: Jack.
Jack!
What are you going to do?
When did all this undercover *** start?
Were you at it when we were together?
It's my job.
No, I wasn't at it when we were together.
I was recruited after I got divorced.
You shouldn't have dragged my mother into this.
What could I do?
I couldn't just turn up at the garda station.
You used her. It's not fair.
You've given her the wrong impression.
Jack!
FINBARR: Yeah, yeah. Right.
That'll be 50 Euro the round trip.
Grand.
See you there.
Bye-bye.
Jack Driscoll?
Garda Colvin. Can I help you?
Chief Superintendent Lynch. It's Jack Driscoll I'm after.
FINBARR: Oh, right, sir.
Well, Sergeant Driscoll will be back here any minute now.
I tell you what,
why don't you make yourself comfortable,
because, you see, like, I'm a bit tied up right at the minute,
and I have...
I can see you're a busy man, Garda Colvin.
You get on with whatever it is you have to do.
Right.
We could get some real work done if it wasn't for all this ***.
Isn't that right, Sergeant?
Chief Superintendent Lynch. Organized Crime Unit.
If it's any consolation,
the pile on my desk is twice what you have here.
So you have a drowned man on your hands.
That's right.
And is it true that you went into the sea after him
at night at this time of year?
JACK: It's not something you stop to think about.
Oh, I don't know about that.
That's the kind of thing they hand out medals for.
Well, I lost him, so it made no difference.
Yeah. Very sad.
But you can look yourself in the eye and say you tried.
You were tested, and you came through.
Have you filed your report yet, Sergeant?
Not yet.
LYNCH: It shouldn't take you long, should it?
The paperwork
on a straightforward accident like that.
Simple stuff compared to all of this ***.
JACK: I'm not at all sure about what happened yet.
It might be an accident. I don't know.
Oh, it's perfectly clear to me, Jack.
I think you'll find that what happened here was an accident,
at least until my people have finished their work.
Your people?
Detective Sergeant Casey and Detective Garda Dooley
are two of the best officers in my unit.
Now, I'm sure I don't have to remind you
of the protocol involved
when an officer stumbles across an undercover operation.
I know how it's supposed to work.
Of course you do.
You're an experienced man.
Now, what Casey and Dooley are doing here
is very important to me.
It's very important to the state.
And I cannot, and I will not,
allow anything to compromise that operation.
That might be easier if I knew what the operation was.
I've told you all you need to know.
Oh, your partner. The one with the taxi.
He doesn't know about your people.
-LYNCH: Local paper? -No.
-LYNCH: Radio? -No.
LYNCH: Good.
That's the way I want to keep it.
Well, would you look at that?
I'd like to have your drive to work in the morning, Jack.
Gerry Driscoll. Remind me.
He was my father.
Of course he was.
I bumped into him once in Templemore.
I think he might have been doing his sergeant exams.
In the early '90s?
That would be it.
[ Chuckles ]
You could never tell what that man was thinking.
Of course, it'd be different for you,
being his son and all that.
I'm sure he would have talked...
He never spoke about work.
He was a very discreet man when it came to the job.
And that's what I want you to be, Jack.
There's no need for you to have anything to do with my people.
As far as you're concerned,
they're just a young couple enjoying a quiet break.
But if you do happen to bump into them again,
a little bit of your father's discretion wouldn't go amiss.
And it's Garda Colvin's wife's taxi, not his.
Oh, I don't worry about that, Jack.
I knew a guard once,
ran a funeral parlor from the barracks.
Can you believe it?
You're the boss. You're the sheriff.
Be safe, be well.
Did you ever learn any German, I wonder?
No.
Pochen.
It's a German word, I believe.
That's where we get the word "poker" from.
Pochen, poker, bluff.
Is that right?
Were you and Daniel close?
We were at the National School together.
EITHNE: Is this the first time you've ever lost someone?
Someone my own age.
Last week, he was in here banging on
about this terrible argument he'd had with his dad.
I told him to get on with it.
And now you wish you'd been a bit more sympathetic?
Yeah, something like that.
You already know how to play, don't you?
NOLAN: Liam.
Where have you been?
I was out on the beach where Daniel died.
Yeah, it's tough when something like this happens.
I know that.
Did you hear any more?
No.
He was supposed to be with us at Mallon's.
He was out in a boat.
Nobody can understand.
Look, Liam, if you had any troubles,
you would talk to me, wouldn't you?
Of course.
Here.
-Dad. -Ah, come on.
Take this.
It'll cover what you lost last night.
And don't waste it, huh?
Thanks.
EITHNE: The pockets were full of sand.
I don't know what it's done to my machine.
JACK: You didn't have to do all that.
I could have ironed them myself.
Like that one you've on, you mean?
Look, it's a pity you didn't bring Maura over
to meet your dad while he was still alive.
They'd have got on well, I think.
Yeah, he was always a big hit with the ladies.
She's a lovely-looking woman.
JACK: And she's a mind of her own as do I.
Here.
Big box of his stuff down at the station.
EITHNE: And he'd have you think he wasn't a sentimental man.
JACK: Did he ever mention him?
EITHNE: Lynch?
Your father was always one
for keeping up with who was in and who was out
at the Phoenix Park,
but he's one you would remember.
Bit of a crusader.
He's done well for himself, hasn't he?
JACK: Mm-hmm. Chief Superintendent.
What did Dad say about him?
EITHNE: The worst thing your father could say about someone
was that he had no sense of humor.
But your man here must be good to get where he is.
How do you know him?
His name came up.
EITHNE: Have you any news of Daniel?
No. I'm on my way to the hospital now
to pick up the autopsy report.
I'll see you later.
[ Bell rings ]
[ Indistinct conversations ]
I'm sorry.
The last thing I wanted was to bring you out here.
I didn't want to have to come here, Michael.
I thought this operation was in safe hands.
I thought I could concentrate on the Dublin end of things
and leave this side to you.
We couldn't have planned on the kid going in the water.
That came out of nowhere.
Did you speak to this culchie guard yet?
I told him that until you've finished your work here,
what he has on his hands
is a simple, straightforward accident.
Did you tell him what we're doing?
No. He knows who you are, but not what you're doing.
Is he happy with that?
LYNCH: With Driscoll's record, he's lucky to have a job.
He'd be a fool to risk his career over this.
He'd be a lot easier to handle
if he hadn't been mixed up with Maura way back.
That emotional business,
that really complicates things.
LYNCH: Dooley has good instincts.
She can handle it.
CASEY: I'm wondering if it wouldn't be better
just to pull out now.
[ Chuckles ] Are you serious?
Yeah.
Rather than have the thing go off half-cocked.
Michael, this operation means a lot to me.
And to me.
LYNCH: And this is your chance to prove it.
This is your chance to make your mark.
As you well know, we don't have a great record with this target.
WOMAN: More coffee?
-Excuse me? -WOMAN: More coffee?
No. Thank you.
The idea was to keep it simple, small, low-key.
Get in, get the evidence, get out.
Now, I chose you, Michael, above all the others.
I chose you.
We have to deliver.
You have to deliver.
Now, this operation goes ahead in spite of your drowned man.
Yeah?
Any sign of alcohol?
No.
Drugs?
Nothing. Nothing at all.
Okay, thanks.
Actually, I thought I might drop
his personal effects and his clothes
back to his parents.
Sure. I'll ask one of the nurses.
Great. Thank you.
I had to pick up some paperwork at the hospital.
They asked me to drop this off.
Some of Daniel's things.
Saw you in town.
I was on my way out to the boat.
Sorry, Brede. There's nothing yet.
It might be useful for me to have a look at his room.
Would that be okay?
Will you bring the guard up and show him Daniel's room?
Tell me about the argument.
What argument?
The argument you had with Daniel.
What was that about?
There was no argument.
The same as any other family. About his future.
What he was going to do with his life.
What was he going to do?
Anything but go to sea.
I can't blame him, really.
The business is finished.
JACK: He was playing a lot of poker.
CIARAN: Not a lot. Just with his friends.
For money?
No, no.
JACK: What about online?
I told you before.
It was just a bit of fun.
It's an easy way to lose a lot of money.
Easy to let things get out of control.
You think maybe he was in debt?
Lads of his age often find it difficult
to speak to their families.
Bottle it up.
Are you suggesting he did this on purpose?
No.
I don't think it was deliberate.
I think Daniel went into the water by accident.
What I want to find out is what he was doing out there
in the first place.
Was Daniel involved in drugs in any way?
Good God, no.
He was never interested in anything like that in his life.
Eugene reported your dory missing
first thing this morning.
Had Daniel taken it out before?
BREDE: The dory?
What would he have been doing out in the dark
in that little thing?
CIARAN: Look, nobody knows what happened.
The boat was gone,
but nobody knows what it was he was doing out there.
Now you're asking me questions
about his poker playing and drugs and God knows what.
Drugs? That's not Daniel.
And the poker,
sure, that was just a hobby with them all nowadays.
I have to ask.
I know you do.
And it's true.
You do hear these stories about the young people,
how there's pressure on them
and the parents only find out when it's too late.
What are you saying?
I'm saying that you hear these things, that's all.
Good God, man.
If my son was thinking of taking his own life,
I would have known about it.
I loved him.
He was my own blood.
I would have known if he was in trouble.
I don't understand what all these questions are for.
I'm sorry, Brede.
I'm trying to find out what happened to your son.
Let's get back to Denis Nolan.
Do you have anything to do with him?
I know him.
He loaned me money.
What?
Couple of thousand.
5,000.
5,000 Euro?
CIARAN: Yeah, and I paid him back.
It was purely a business arrangement.
A small loan.
What on earth were you doing
taking money from a man like that?
Nolan doesn't do favors.
He doesn't do anything for nothing.
What has all this got to do with my son and Denis Nolan?
Nothing.
It has nothing to do with the man.
The guard is asking you a question, Ciaran.
Why is he asking?
What's he suggesting?
I'm suggesting nothing, Mrs. O'Malley.
I'm just asking questions.
Where is he?
MAURA: Talk to me.
I want Casey. I want some answers.
Jack, be reasonable. Lynch told you to keep away.
Why don't you come down
and tell Daniel's mother why her son died?
She needs some answers.
And I can't give them to her.
You know what I'm doing here.
No, I don't, because you won't tell me.
You know that I can't talk about it.
You didn't have to lie to me.
Do you think I enjoyed that?
It's a possibility, isn't it? Given your record.
Jack, grow up.
This isn't about us.
There is no us.
This is about work.
Now, leave me alone before you blow the whole thing wide open.
What exactly is your relationship
with Ciaran O'Malley?
You're behaving like a fool.
I have Daniel out there in Ciaran's boat, alone,
and nobody can tell me why.
I also have a local man --
a solicitor with a dodgy reputation --
down near the beach at the same time.
Now, I think Daniel was trying to get ashore
when he went into the water.
But he had no car there, so he must have been meeting someone.
You're putting all of us in danger by coming here.
Including, if you only knew it, Ciaran O'Malley and his wife.
JACK: No, you did that when you rang me
to say that someone was in trouble.
You were *** scared and you didn't know what to do,
so you called me.
Now, I didn't ask to be dragged into this.
Now that I have been,
the least you can do is tell me what the *** is going on.
Okay.
Let's try Casey.
Why don't you stop and think
before you make a very serious mistake?
You were both watching the beach the night Daniel O'Malley died.
-Why? -What did I tell you?
This is why they sent him out here.
This is why it was a bad idea to go and see him.
How long have you been in this job, Driscoll?
Don't treat me like a fool.
I'm sick of lying to decent people.
Is that so?
And would that be because you have scruples?
Because you've got a duty to perform?
You know what?
*** your scruples!
*** your duty!
This is a major investigation --
Into what?
Go on.
A 17-year-old boy is lying on a slab
because of what you're doing here.
And now I find out his father's involved somehow as well.
I don't care about your operation.
I don't give a *** how major it is.
I think you deliberately placed him and his family at risk.
Now, do you expect me to sit here and do nothing
while you *** on my doorstep and expect me to clear it up?
One way or the other, Casey, I'm having some answers.
You're having nothing!
Stick to handing out parking tickets to tourists.
Jack, be reasonable.
There was nothing we could do for Daniel.
I'm sorry. That is the truth. Believe me.
Ask him why he didn't go in after him.
Jack, please.
This has to do with drugs, doesn't it?
Daniel O'Malley was mixed up in it somehow.
Leave it alone.
One death is enough.
Go home to your mother
and leave this to people who are trained to handle it.
Okay.
Let's try a different approach.
Driscoll.
Look, I know what your problem is.
I know what this is all about, but if you think she's going --
Michael Casey, I'm arresting you...
[ Spits ]
Assault on an officer will do nicely.
MAURA: Jack, wait. Jack, please listen.
You're not obliged to say anything,
-but anything you do say... -Can you believe this?
-...may be used against you... -Jack!
...in evidence.
You're behaving like an idiot.
If I find your friend here sent a 17-year-old to his death,
I swear to God I'll bury him.
Now move!
LYNCH: He what?
This guy is starting to get on my nerves.
Okay, I'm onto it.
***!
JACK: Sit.
Garda Colvin,
this is Mr. Michael Casey, all the way from Dublin.
I'm bringing him in
for resisting arrest and assaulting a guard.
Oh, is that right?
What do you two farmers think you're going to do to me
in this ***?
This is a joke. You're a joke.
All the way from Dublin and assaulting a guard?
That's not a joke in my book.
Neither is reckless endangerment,
which is the next charge I'm looking at.
Do you think this is going to impress her?
FINBARR: Oh, yeah, Mr. Casey.
You'll be the gentleman staying in the little cottage.
You know, this isn't the sort of behavior
we expect from people enjoying a quiet holiday.
Mr. Casey's being a bit vague
about exactly what he's doing here.
I'm hoping he'll be able to shed some light
on Daniel O'Malley's death.
Keep hoping.
Let's get some particulars, shall we?
FINBARR: Righto.
Ah, this can take a bit of time, Mr. Casey.
Because you're making it up as you go along?
No, no, I mean with all the forms and the bureaucracy
and all that sort of thing.
Would you like some tea or coffee
while we're going through the process?
Enjoy it while you can.
Right, that's a no, is it?
I'd better take a note of that.
Prisoner refused refreshments.
Now, would you mind emptying your pockets, please, Mr. Casey?
Let's assume you're serious.
We both know you can't charge me here.
I didn't know that.
Did you know that, Jack?
I think you'll find we do things a bit differently
out here in the Wild West.
Your pockets.
JACK: Let's see if we can get some details
about Mr. Casey from that lot, shall we?
If my operation goes down the Swanee
because of your ego...
Can I speak to you outside, Sergeant?
You've got the wrong man there, Sergeant.
I have a man who assaulted me.
A man I believe endangered the life
of someone barely out of school.
Now, I don't care who you are or what you're doing here,
that's not something I'm prepared to ignore.
Maura, could you get over here to the station straightaway?
Thanks.
Now, I thought I made myself perfectly clear
the last time we spoke.
There's a bigger picture here, and you're not seeing it.
Maybe if you told me what it was.
Did I get you wrong, Jack?
If you assumed I was my father, then, yes, I believe you did.
Now, you're a determined man, and I respect that.
JACK: So stop treating me like a fool.
I've been involved
in the internal politics of this job before,
and I didn't like it.
Get in the car.
Is it true you can even send e-mails on these?
CASEY: That's still my property.
Would you mind not *** around with it?
FINBARR: [ Laughs ]
Would you believe we don't even have a computer?
Half the time, the powers that be
don't even know what we're up to.
[ Thunder crashes ]
I'm going to tell you something that I don't tell many people.
I was out near the border in '79
in a one-on-one station like yours.
My sergeant was a great man.
He was a great country copper.
One spring morning, he walked into a post office
and a terrorist gunman shot him dead.
That's one of five bullets they dug out of his body.
You can imagine what five of those would do to you.
That gunman was never caught, though we knew who he was.
And these days, he's hardly off the front pages.
International businessman, public benefactor.
He's a man with a violent past, but he has one great talent.
He can stop certain people from rocking the political boat.
Do you follow me?
No one wants to ask awkward questions
about Eddie McCann or where his money comes from
just as long as his old friends stay quiet.
Now, men like us,
we might wonder why we should be ignoring them
just because it's politically expedient.
But we're only a couple of guards, aren't we, Jack?
What do we know?
I'll tell you what I know.
Last year alone,
Eddie McCann was behind the importation
of 50 million worth of drugs into this country.
He has 10 million worth of ***
lying at the bottom of your beautiful bay as we speak.
Now, we've known for some time
that he's a major player in the drugs trade,
but we've never been able to bring a successful case
against him.
I've had two operations against him fall at the last fence.
Nolan is the last piece in the jigsaw.
He's the link between the drugs in your bay and McCann.
Ah, well, plenty of people are wondering
how a country solicitor like Nolan
managed to do quite so well for himself.
LYNCH: Well, now you know.
Our job is to catch Nolan with his hands on the drugs.
Isn't this what you signed up for?
Wouldn't nailing a man like McCann make all the ***,
all the bloody paperwork worthwhile?
Yeah, but surely Nolan's not going to risk anything
now he knows that I'm sniffing around.
And that's why you got to stop sniffing about
and let Michael Casey get on with his job.
Now, as you point out,
they're unlikely to risk bringing it in to the same spot
now that Daniel's dead and you're investigating his death.
But without Daniel,
Casey is going to have to go to his father
and make a new arrangement.
So, Daniel was Casey's tout, not Ciaran?
I couldn't tell you before. I couldn't take the chance.
The more people who know, the bigger the risk of a leak.
Now, that bullet's been in my pocket for nearly 30 years,
and I would dearly like to give it back to Mr. McCann.
I'm close, Jack.
Oh, I'm that close.
Finbarr, release Detective Sergeant Casey.
Yeah. That's right.
So, what happens to Ciaran O'Malley?
LYNCH: He's a drug trafficker. Do you care?
JACK: I care about his family.
He's not the only one at risk.
LYNCH: Ciaran O'Malley dragged his own son into this.
He's two mortgages -- a house and a boat.
There's Spanish trawlers out there
hoovering up everything with fins
while his government,
the same government who's in bed with Eddie McCann,
is telling him that he can't fish for nine months of the year
because of E.U. quotas.
So he goes to Nolan. He borrows a few thousand.
Nolan asks for a small favor in return.
But it doesn't stop there.
Because with McCann and Nolan, it never stops.
Once they've found a safe way in, they'll keep coming back.
Now, as I say, Jack, you can understand,
you can sympathize.
But you also have to judge.
You have any problems,
give me a shout before you do anything else.
FINBARR: So, it's business as usual, is it?
Let the professionals get on with their job.
Leave it to the experts.
Turn a blind eye. Whichever you prefer.
What did you make of Casey?
FINBARR: Did you see the watch on him
and all those fancy little gadgets?
Sure, nobody could blame you for wanting a bit of that
if it was on offer.
But these guys aren't like you and me, Jack.
There's no honor where these guys are concerned.
Everyone is expendable.
They should never have involved a kid like Daniel.
And leaving him to drown
in the middle of the bloody night like that.
If Casey was any sort of a man,
he would have gone in there after him.
And if he's supposed to be the boss,
why did he let her call me?
Why didn't he ring me himself?
I tell you what.
He called someone in the middle of the night.
That is his last-number redial.
He thought I was playing submarines or something,
but I thought it would be no harm to check who he was calling
while he was here.
JACK: That must be Lynch.
FINBARR: Have you got his number?
Yeah.
That's not it.
Well, do you want me to give it a go?
No.
No, hold out.
Thanks.
FINBARR: Right.
[ Dialing ]
[ Cellphone rings ]
Jack, are you all right?
I don't think that's a very good idea.
Okay, just give me a minute. I'll think of an excuse.
MAN: Darragh, this deal we're hearing about
between Eddie McCann's Premium Holdings
and Chinese Investment Bank...
DARRAGH: Yeah, I spoke to Eddie McCann yesterday
and it's very much in line
with his long-term strategy for the company.
MAN: And yet he's made a name for himself
by insisting on ploughing
a large part of the company's profits
back into Ireland.
DARRAGH: He has.
Not taking out of Ireland what he's earned in Ireland.
It's something of a mantra with him.
He built the company up from nothing,
and you'd have to say the policy's paid off handsomely.
Okay, let me call you back.
Who was that?
Lynch.
What did he want?
Probably making sure
I hadn't been arrested by your boyfriend again.
God, he's really got under your skin, hasn't he?
I'm just fascinated, really, how you ever got involved
with a gorilla like Driscoll.
Anyhow, he's finished as soon as you get out of here.
What, you're going to get even now?
Maura, the man shouldn't be wearing the uniform.
Or his idle, bloody sidekick.
I thought you were going to bed.
No. I need to use the car.
What for?
I have to get something in the chemist.
Wait a sec. Are you going to see him?
Do you want to come with me?
So you've had the sermon?
It's well-rehearsed, then, is it?
Yeah.
Doesn't mean it's not sincere, though.
McCann should have been behind bars years ago.
And is Casey the man to put him there?
He's very anxious, Jack.
He's got a lot riding on this.
And he's jealous of my relationship with you,
nervous that Lynch is confiding in you.
I've worked with him before.
Look, I'm not having a go at you.
I know a little bit about the world you work in,
and I know sometimes you end up not knowing who to trust.
Do you trust Casey?
I don't like him.
Does it bother you that he was using a 17-year-old as his tout?
Those are the sort of calls we have to make, Jack.
Daniel was looking for a way to get his father off the hook.
Tell me exactly what happened the night he died.
Is that why you brought me here? Look, I had to lie to Casey.
Maura, it's important.
We were at the cottage
watching Daniel drag that stuff onto the boat.
JACK: On his own?
He was supposed to be with his father.
The two of them together.
That is how it was supposed to work.
We couldn't make out the details,
but we could see that he was in trouble.
He couldn't manage it on his own.
So why didn't you do something to help him?
MAURA: Casey said that it was too late, we had to let it run.
And Nolan was on the beach, remember.
We couldn't just turn up.
The next thing we knew, the boat was empty,
and Daniel was in the water.
I couldn't just stand there and watch him drown.
JACK: But Casey could?
Did he do anything at all?
He called Lynch.
How do you know?
MAURA: He told me.
Look, Lynch brought Casey into the squad.
He gave him all his breaks. They're like father and son.
Lynch told me that you've had a few cases go down
at the last hurdle before.
Yeah, because it's always touch and go
with operations like this.
Look, you can catch the street dealers
and the lowlifes and the runners,
but with people like McCann and Nolan, it's something else.
The least suspicion and they're gone.
That is why you have to let things run.
Even if someone's drowning in front of you.
Sometimes, yes.
Okay.
But the fact is Casey doesn't have a great track record,
does he?
That's why this is so important to him.
This is a list of recently-dialed calls
from Casey's mobile.
I know. Just look.
That has to be the call Casey made that you say was to Lynch.
Now, is that Lynch's number?
It's not the number I use.
JACK: Do you recognize it?
No.
JACK: Doesn't that make you think?
Lynch told me this was being kept small scale
so that there was less risk of any leaks.
But here's your man Casey ringing God-knows-who
at just the moment when it all starts to go wrong.
So, you have a suspicious number.
What are you going to do about it?
That's why I wanted to talk to you.
You know Lynch.
What do you think I should do?
Do you want my advice, Jack?
Think very carefully before you call him.
You've a nice life here.
Another couple of days and we'll be gone.
Don't mess it up because you've taken a dislike to Casey.
[ Sighs ]
EITHNE: Did you sleep well?
Not great.
Look, Jack, I know I can't help you with your work
in the way your father might have done,
but I do know what this job is like.
JACK: I know you do.
Look, what I'm saying is, he had me to share it with.
So, if you ever want to talk - about anything at all.
Was he a worry to you?
You know he was.
Every minute he was out there in that uniform.
Why I thought it would be any different with you,
I don't know.
But I know you'll always do the right thing.
Like Dad, you mean?
I'm away for my bath.
[ Door closes ]
[ Ringing ]
McCANN: McCann.
Hello?
Hello, is Jimmy there?
McCANN: Jimmy?
No. You've got the wrong number.
Sorry. I must have misdialed.
[ Busy signal ]
[ Beep ]
Can I speak to you alone?
We're out here in the open, Jack.
I think that's how we should keep it.
I believe you have an informant.
Someone inside your operation.
Did you bring me all the way out here to listen to this?
You're going to have to give me a bit more than that, Jack.
I think Detective Casey is passing on information
to the man you're targeting.
To Eddie McCann.
What?
Are you going to stand here and listen to this ***?
JACK: I don't have what you'd call hard evidence.
It's time this man was relieved of his duties.
At the moment, all I have is circumstantial evidence.
At the moment.
He has no evidence of any kind.
From the moment he wandered into this thing,
the first moment he caught sight of me with his old girlfriend,
he's been trying to put a stick in my wheel.
That's what this is all about. Him and her.
It has nothing to do with Maura.
He thinks I'm *** her, and it's driving him mad.
Is that what you think?
That I'm *** her? Is it?
All right, Michael. That's enough.
CASEY: She only came on to you because I told her to.
She's laughing at you.
LYNCH: Michael, enough!
You were told to back off.
You were told you were out of your depth.
JACK: I want this operation to succeed as much as you do.
I want to see Nolan go down,
and I want to see justice for Daniel O'Malley.
You mentioned evidence.
The night Daniel drowned, Casey dialed this number.
So what?
JACK: Do you recognize it?
LYNCH: It's just a phone number, Jack.
I don't know whose.
I called that number this morning.
Eddie McCann answered it.
This is crazy.
LYNCH: Give me your phone, Michael.
Oh, this is ridiculous.
The whole thing is in his head.
What do you know?
What do you know? Nothing!
The phone.
You dialed the same number again last night.
What's that about?
I'm allowed to make phone calls.
-I was checking something. -What?
I don't have to explain anything to this man.
I don't have to explain myself to this failure, this useless --
No, you don't, but you do to me.
I told you.
I was trying to get an idea of McCann's movements.
After Daniel drowned, I thought...
I wondered if he suspected something, so...
So you thought you'd give him a call?
Just to check in?
How many times have we been so close to nailing McCann?
Hmm?
I thought, you know, if I could find another way to him,
a way to make him...
-Trust you? -Exactly. Yeah.
And then I could use that trust against...
Oh, Michael, Michael.
You are clutching at straws.
No. Chief, you know me.
How long have I been with you?
Ah, come on, man. You know me.
Have I let you down in some way, Michael?
Have I?
You can't catch him.
And if you do, you'll never get a conviction.
We both know that.
Was I going to be stuck with you till you retired
and still be chasing the same man?
Is that what I was supposed to do with my career?
LYNCH: I trusted you.
All your talk about the big picture.
You can't see the big picture
because you're obsessed with one man.
Eddie McCann is a protected species.
No one can touch him because he's too important.
Without McCann holding things together,
we all know what happens.
So this is how you justify it to yourself?
No, no. It's what you told me.
Eddie McCann is the price we have to pay
for peace in this country.
You won't catch him
because no one in this country wants him caught.
Why?
Because a trial would be worse than allowing him to carry on
with his drugs and his tax dodges
and people smuggling, too, for all I know.
He's too big and too powerful, and he knows too much.
This is your crusade, not mine.
I could have been an inspector by now.
Instead, I'm stuck here trying to sort out
your stupid, *** blood feud with Eddie McCann.
[ Coughing ]
How were you going to get him off the hook this time, huh?
If Daniel hadn't drowned and we'd got our evidence on Nolan?
Talk to me, Michael.
Good man.
McCann can always find another Nolan.
McCann would have had Nolan killed.
Give me your gun.
Did Daniel tell you he was going to be alone that night?
No.
If his father had been with him,
none of this would have happened.
Go and wait in the car, Michael.
You were suspicious of him from the start.
Didn't trust him.
LYNCH: And you were right.
I need you to go to Ciaran O'Malley
and tell him that the deal is still on.
Can you do that for me?
Yeah.
I'll tell Maura.
What about him?
Oh, don't worry about Michael.
He'll do what he's told from now on.
Thanks, Jack.
MAN: No sign of an early resolution.
Returning to today's top story.
Shares in Premium Holdings rose again
when it was announced that the long-expected deal
with Chinese Investment Bank
now has ministerial backing.
MAN: How are you, Jackie?
[ Indistinct conversations ]
Brede.
I'm sorry for your trouble.
Truly, I am.
Thank you, Jack.
Thank you.
Ciaran.
Is there somewhere we can talk?
At the moment, you don't think things can get any worse.
I'm telling you now they can get a lot worse.
You're mixed up with people
who will do anything to get what they want.
They didn't care about Daniel,
and they don't care about you and Brede.
You're all expendable.
Do you understand that?
It's time to talk to me, Ciaran.
You want to talk to me, don't you?
I have a priest down there in my own front room
if I want any of that ***.
JACK: Ciaran, I know everything.
The deal with Nolan, what you've been doing.
What you were trying to bring ashore,
where, who was waiting for it,
where it's going.
In fact, I know more than you do
because I know who's behind it all.
I don't know what my son was doing in the water,
but it was nothing to do with drugs.
Listen to me.
You're sitting in the room where he slept.
You can smell his aftershave off the pillow.
This is a house of mourning. Will you leave us in peace?
-Please? -Peace?
There isn't going to be any more peace.
Listen to what I'm saying.
Detectives from Dublin were onto Daniel.
Daniel was their tout.
Dates, times, they knew it all because Daniel told them.
And why would he do that?
Why would he betray you, his own father?
Because I was too scared to do it myself.
I wasn't man enough.
He wanted me to go to the guards.
That's what the argument was about.
He could see where all of this was going.
He knew I'd never get Nolan off my back.
He wanted us to be free of all of this.
He wouldn't let me go in the boat with him.
Now I know why.
JACK: I think it's time to tell Brede the truth.
How can I tell her?
JACK: She needs to know why her son died.
But you can't be with them all the time, can you?
You have to trust them. You have to let them go.
The guard wants to talk to us.
BREDE: How could you do that to my son?
And the detectives that all came down from Dublin and even you.
I know you risked your life for him,
but he was only a boy and you all used him,
even his own father.
Brede.
No! Don't try to explain!
Nolan came to me, and he offered me money.
I don't want to know why. I don't care why.
We were going to lose everything we had.
BREDE: God, and we did.
My boy. My lovely, lovely boy.
-CIARAN: Our boy. -BREDE: No!
Brede, I'm sorry, but this isn't over.
The *** that Ciaran brought in
is still out there in the bay.
These men are waiting for him to hand it over.
Well, why don't you go out and catch them?
Why don't you go out and catch them?!
They have a fortune tied up in this,
and they're not going to risk it because your son is dead.
-So we're all trapped in this? -JACK: Yes.
Whether we like it or not?
Yes, you are.
CIARAN: They know everything about us.
Oh, God.
So we're all in danger?
If Ciaran doesn't keep up his side of the bargain,
then you're in grave danger.
The children?
Brede, these are unbelievable sums of money
we're talking about here.
These men will stop at nothing.
Is there anything I can do? Please.
Well, you can help us catch the people behind this.
And then maybe, at the trial...
I can't promise anything, but I want to help you.
Senior officers want to help you,
but you have to agree to help them.
You know where the drugs are.
Why don't you just go out and tell them everything
and be done with it?
That's not good enough, Brede. Denis Nolan has to believe
that this operation is going ahead exactly as planned,
exactly as Ciaran agreed.
You have to make Nolan believe that.
We need clear evidence that ties Nolan to that ***.
[ Indistinct conversations ]
Thank you for coming, Mr. Nolan.
I'm sorry for your loss, Mrs. O'Malley. I really am.
Ciaran. I'm sorry.
Mr. Nolan.
It's a sad day, Sergeant.
JACK: It is.
I hear you acquitted yourself well.
It's a strange business, all the same.
In the water at that hour of the night.
I'm not sure it's all that strange.
So, you have some idea of what happened?
Daniel was playing a lot of poker online.
It looks as if he ran up some big debts in his father's name.
Ciaran has his own financial problems.
Surely, you're not suggesting
that the young lad took his own life?
Seems the most likely explanation.
Do they know this?
I've just told them.
NOLAN: Jesus.
You and I have some experience of dealing with bereavements,
but this -- Well, now, it's a tough one.
I'm sure they'll be glad of your sympathy.
They're very vulnerable right now.
I'm sorry to be barging in again like this.
I said any time, and I meant it.
Do you have any regrets?
About resigning from a good job, I mean,
because of... Well, whatever it was.
I don't know.
I suppose time will tell.
Sorry. I don't mean to be rude.
EITHNE: And you're not.
I'm poking my nose in where I've no business.
I just think it's an awful shame
that a young woman like yourself, with a good job...
Did you work?
When I met Jack's father, I was training to be a teacher.
Really?
EITHNE: It was a very common thing --
the guard and the schoolteacher.
You worked as a team.
People find that very difficult nowadays, don't they?
EITHNE: Because they don't know how to share, is what it is.
It's all about being an individual now, isn't it?
Not that there's anything wrong with that,
but it makes sharing a life difficult.
I don't envy the youngsters nowadays.
Do you worry about Jack?
EITHNE: The worry never goes away,
no matter what age they are.
I suppose I'd like to see him settled.
I only ever seem to bring him bad luck.
People think Jack's like his father, but he's like me.
Once he makes a decision, he makes his own luck.
Well, look who's here.
I'm afraid I have to go.
Okay.
Did she have the photos out again?
I know you think she's mothering you,
but, actually, I think she'd like to have you off her hands.
Is that right?
What's the story with Casey?
He's with the chief.
[ Cellphone rings ]
Ciaran.
Okay, what time?
And you know what to do?
That's right.
Just make the drop, take the money, same as always.
Okay.
It's coming in tomorrow morning.
[ Dialing ]
Sir, it's Jack Driscoll.
Well done, Jack. Leave it with me.
Call McCann.
Tell him the drop is on for tomorrow morning.
He was in the water.
-Jack. -I thought I'd saved him.
Jack. Shh. I'm here, Jack.
Shh.
What time is it?
It's 4:00.
It's not even light yet.
Is that going to keep on happening?
Yeah. I expect so for a while.
JACK: Finbarr?
We're on our way.
Just keep out of sight.
[ Camera shutter clicking ]
Thank you.
What's wrong?
Come on, man, take it.
Just take it.
By the way, I don't know what you and Brede
have decided about flowers,
but maybe you'd get a decent spray for the boy from me.
JACK: Nolan!
[ Gunshot ]
Ciaran, put the gun down!
Put the gun down!
Ciaran.
Ciaran.
Ciaran, you can help us put Nolan and the rest of them away.
Ciaran, please, you have to be brave about this.
Ciaran, please don't do this.
For Daniel's sake.
I thought he'd hit you.
Chief, we've got what we wanted.
McCann is all yours.
I'm on my way back to Dublin, Jack,
now that this part of the operation's over.
McCann's already in custody.
I'd say you're looking forward to returning that bullet.
It helped to keep me focused.
You know, I don't think I could ever tire of that view.
But if you do feel you want a change,
why don't you come up and see me in the Park?
You and Maura work well together.
JACK: I might do that.
What's happening about Casey?
LYNCH: Maura's driving him back to Dublin.
Take care, Jack.
These guards here will take you to the district headquarters
where you'll be formally charged.
Do you understand that, Ciaran?
Are you sure you won't make a phone call, Ciaran?
Not to Brede?
No.
She has to know what happened.
You were there. You saw.
Will you go to his funeral for me?
Yes. Yes, of course I will.
[ Cellphone rings ]
I hope you're not going to say goodbye to me on the phone.
Where are you?
Okay, I'm coming over.
Finbarr, hold the fort, will you?
MAURA: He must have decided not to wait
till they came looking for him.
I would have helped him.
I don't think you could have done anything.
MAURA: I could have stopped him from doing this.
Maura, look at him. He still has his gun.
I know. I know his gun.
Casey didn't have a gun.
I saw Lynch take it off him out there in the forest.
So he gave it back to him.
To the man who just betrayed him?
Why would he do that?
What, you think Lynch wanted him to do this?
All I'm saying is that when I left them,
Lynch had Casey's gun.
Now it's back in Casey's hand.
Jack, I think you should leave this to me.
-Look the other way again? -No.
I can't do that, Maura.
I'm the investigating officer here.
I'm going to have the Ombudsman and Internal Affairs
all over this.
-Do you want me to lie to them? -No one is asking you to lie.
Let them look at the evidence. Let them decide.
You don't have to say anything about the gun.
This is Lynch's problem. Let him solve it.
We can make sure that you don't get dragged in.
This could be just what it looks like.
-It could be suicide. -We know it's not!
Everyone will assume that it is.
You know I'm right.
Jack, I don't want this to wreck things for us.
I thought there was no us.
It depends on you.
MAN: Some breaking news just coming in to us here.
GardaĆ are at the Dublin headquarters
of Premium Holdings
and the Killiney home of Chief Executive Eddie McCann,
who was taken to Pearse Street station for questioning
earlier this morning.
Senior officers refuse to confirm reports
that the raids are connected
to today's seizure on the N7 of ***
with an estimated street value of 20 million Euro.
-Cathal. -How are you? Usual?
Yeah.
Good man.
Liam.
Have you seen the share price today?
No.
Through the floor.
And all the time, you're after these people
and you don't say a word.
Did you miss out there?
EITHNE: Good God, no.
We're not doing this for fun. We're in it to make money.
We sold at just the right moment.
Everyone will think I got a tip-off.
Of course, I understand why you couldn't say anything.
I'm sure you do.
I knew she wasn't what she said she was.
Of course that's her doing the job she's paid to do,
keep us all safe in our beds.
She's a clever girl, all right, to do well in that world.
She is.
You seemed to be getting on so well.
It's not over, is it?
No.
I hope not.
Subtitling made possible by RLJ Entertainment