Episode list

Waking the Dead

Harbinger: Part 1
Sarah Cavendish, who had to leave the anti-terrorist squad for undisclosed reasons, joins Boyd's team as they reopen the case of banker Donald Rees, missing for three years. They speak to his wife Julie, who has terminal cancer and her children Miranda and Toby, who report seeing an elderly couple in funeral black stalking them when Donald vanished. They learn that the Rees' other daughter died of cancer due to radiation at a local hospital. CCTV from 2007 reveals that the old couple approached Donald just before he disappeared, drawing out 100,000 pounds from the bank. They were the Geigers, who lost a son at the same hospital in the late 1980s and whose skeletons the team find. Then their house is torched, killing the policewoman guarding it.
8.1 /10
Harbinger: Part 2
Grace believes that Julie, the Geigers' babysitter when their son Andrew died, deliberately killed Andrew and exposed her daughter to radiation to gain sympathy for herself as she has a psychological condition which craves attention. This is confirmed when Una, a nurse at the hospital when Andrew died, tells Boyd that she had her suspicions and told her boyfriend Glenn Burke. Burke, however, put the Geigers up to haunting the Rees family to blackmail Donald into giving them money and killed the old couple when they decided to give it back. Una has survived an attempt to kill her by Burke, who torched the Geigers' house to destroy evidence linking them with him but Burke is then killed by Julie when he breaks into her house. The team are left with the possibility that Julie is not ill after all but that this is another attention-seeking ploy. If so, did she kill Donald when he found out what she had done?
8.3 /10
Care: Part 1

Sat, Mar 19, 2011
Thirteen years after she was abducted, as a seven year old, from a care home, Claire Somers is murdered, her eyes gouged out. The abductor also gouged out the eyes on the corpse of Robert Fenchurch, the care home supervisor who tried to stop Claire's kidnapping. Prior to her death Claire had also abducted a young girl, Abigail Harding, and locked her in a cupboard, but, when quizzed by Boyd, Abigail can only tell him that she saw the Bagman, a child's fictional bogey figure known to her family. Clare was an escort and the team find that prostitution and drug peddling were rife in the care home in the 1980s. Clare also seemed to know Abigail's G.P. sister Teresa, who subsequently falls to her death from a balcony after seeing the Bagman. Peter Broading, the home's current manager, who was a resident aged twelve when Claire disappeared tells Boyd that his arms were cut by David Drew, another boy from the home, to punish him for colluding with Fenchurch in the prostitution ring. However Drew also went missing at the same time as Claire. Is he the Bagman?
8 /10
Care: Part 2

Sun, Mar 20, 2011
Sarah finds a letter sent from Clare to her mother in 1989, three years after her abduction, stating that she was very happy. The team locate the house in which she lived in Sussex, now empty but with signs that children lived there. Grace discovers that several children were taken from the home, including Clare and David Drew, by social workers who feared for their welfare, David Drew gouging out Fenchurch's eyes after he was accidentally run over. The social workers are Leo and Karen Harding and their grown-up children are among those they saved. When Clare met Teresa she threatened to blow the whistle on them and was murdered, but by whom? And which of the Harding's boys is Drew?
7.9 /10
Solidarity: Part 1
In a sewer below Westminster workmen discover the skeleton of murdered Falklands hero turned peace campaigner Piers Kennedy, missing since 1983 after making anti-nuclear speeches. He was known to Grace, herself on a Government watch list for her anti-war views and she recalls his associates; Lucy Christie, the girlfriend he dumped for a fling with Bonnie Yorke, still the partner of fellow campaigner Ralph Palmer and the charming but volatile marine Murray. Other suspects number Lucy's father, now Lord Christie, whose dog's hairs were found on the corpse and former friend, the Russian Oleg, now employed by Lord Christie, who turned against Piers after the KGB killed his parents. Grace locates Murray, now a paranoid victim of post-traumatic stress, who gives her a tape allegedly showing that MoD police killed Piers. At the same time Eve, revisiting the sewer, is arrested by the same police and Defence minister Jane Hussey warns Boyd to go no further.
7.6 /10
Solidarity: Part 2
Murray's tape shows Piers and three others attacking a nuclear convoy,resulting in a policeman's death and the team believe initially that the government killed Piers in revenge. However Eve,released from custody,discovers that Piers had a terminal bone marrow disease and,knowing this,had actually joined the peace movement to discredit it with violence. Murray confronts Lucy,who,along with Hugo,Piers and himself,comprised the attackers but she is murdered and Murray set up for her death. Boyd takes him into the team's protection and they learn who tipped off the quartet about the convoy and would want the attackers silenced. Another death follows before Piers' killer is exposed and Grace almost dies in the process,leading Sarah to tell ACC Smith that she has doubts as to Boyd's fitness to lead his team.
7.7 /10
Conviction: Part 1
Six years after the murdered corpse of an unknown young man was discovered in a reservoir Eve identifies him as medical student Karl Barclay. Karl's father Gideon takes the news stoically but his wife Lisbetta is superstitious and disturbed and sees her son as having brought Beelzebub into the family when he converted to Islam. Karl's younger brother Jakob and ex-girlfriend Naz speak of a letter Karl sent Naz before he disappeared but Eve believes it is a forgery and the team is also amazed to learn that Karl's body was cremated only days after its discovery. Lisbetta has buried several of Karl's belongings in the garden, including a train ticket to Manchester and a photo of Karl with his Muslim friends. She is hysterical when they are unearthed and later stabs Gideon, claiming that she killed Karl too. Sarah finds out that Karl's name was on a watch list of suspected terrorists, again probably due to his mother's paranoia.
7.7 /10
Conviction: Part 2
Despite murdering her husband it seems unlikely the delusional Lisbetta killed Karl. Sought out by Jakob Naz says that Mohammed, another group member, killed him before returning to Pakistan and Sarah's colleague from the terrorist squad Tristan also claims Karl was killed for refusing a bombing mission. However, after Boyd is abducted and tied to a bomb, leading Sarah into a trap from which she saves them both, she believes Tristan is lying. The experience also helps her overcome the operation for which she took the blame when one of her policemen was killed. Naz finally admits that she was in love with one of her Islamic contemporaries, which caused her to betray another to the authorities. The case is closed, though not to Boyd's satisfaction but Sarah withdraws all her objections to his leadership.
7.7 /10
Waterloo: Part 1
A disgruntled Boyd is told he is to be promoted to a desk job and if he objects his unorthodox police methods will be exposed. Before he goes he vows to take on the case of several homeless teen-age boys who disappeared,at three monthly intervals,between 1979 and 1982. Dennis Grant,a kindly vicar who provided a shelter for the boys,puts him in touch with Tony Nicholson,the only policeman to show any concern,now a high ranking officer,whose reports at the time mysteriously vanished. Investigations lead to a disused pub where the abducted boys were taken and murdered by a sadist imitating American serial killer Henry Holmes. The gun that killed them was the same one that shot dead disgraced policeman Stanley Heath,another unsolved murder. A contrite Sarah admits to Boyd that she complained about him before going to see Nicholson - about whom she has her suspicions. After she has spied on him talking to an elderly man he captures her at gun-point.
8.6 /10
Waterloo: Part 2
Grace and Boyd interview Stanley Heath's son Jason,who tells them that his father and two other policeman were murdered for beating to death a suspect in custody some years earlier. It seems likely that that prisoner was Nicholson's father and Boyd becomes convinced that Nicholson knew the boys' murderer and shielded him,deliberately losing his reports. The team's concern for Sarah grows as Nicholson brings in two sinister detectives to spy on them. Gradually Boyd works out that crooked property developer George Barlow took the orphaned Nicholson under his wing and that Nicholson,out of loyalty,protected the murderer,who was close to Barlow. Boyd is able to use this to effect belated justice but is he too late to save Sarah?
8.7 /10

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You Can't Buy Luck

You Can't Buy Luck

Wealthy and superstitious race-horse owner Joe Baldwin practices philanthropy because he believes his charity donations bring luck to his ponies. One object of his bounty is gold-digger Jean Jason, about whom he has no illusions, and in order to get rid of her he finances her European vacation, and with her, unknown to Baldwin, goes full-time gigolo/part time artist Paul Vinette. Before a big race Baldwin is at an orphanage near the track and expresses his wishes for rain on the following day as his horse, "Sarcasm", runs best on a muddy track. The orphans resent his wish as it is also to be the day of their annual big outing, as does the orphanage assistant, Betty McKay, who chides Baldwin for his selfish viewpoint. It does rain but "Sarcasm" loses anyway, and Baldwin decides it was because the orphans were pulling against him. He arranges a big party for the kids and he and Betty fall in love. When Jean returns from Europe, she demands $50,000 to fade out of the picture. He tells her he will bring her a check. Paul sees Jean packing her bags, accuses her of running out, and they quarrel. She gets a gun and orders him out of the apartment and they fight for the weapon. Paul is leaving the building as Baldwin enters. A few minutes later, the police receive a call from a man claiming to be Joe Baldwin who says he has just killed Jean Jason. Baldwin is arrested and convicted on circumstantial evidence and sentenced to death. He escapes the police and goes into hiding in the home of a taxicab driver, Frank Bent, he had once befriended. Baldwin, with the aid of Bent and Betty, start the process of proving his innocence and also finding the real killer.

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