- Sargeant Jasper Linney: I suppose there is much that we could talk about.
- Detective William Murdoch: I suppose.
- Sargeant Jasper Linney: Would you rather we didn't?
- Detective William Murdoch: Another fine idea.
- Detective William Murdoch: And you have some basis, no doubt, on which to suspect, Mr. Fremont?
- Sargeant Jasper Linney: Of course. It's not hard science, but I have observed that people frequently look to the left when they are telling a lie.
- Detective William Murdoch: And I have frequently observed that people look to the left when that is the direction they are going in.
- Sargeant Jasper Linney: Based on rigor mortis, he was dead even before he found himself on those train tracks.
- Detective William Murdoch: There's nothing like that in this report.
- Sargeant Jasper Linney: I base that assumption on my personal examination of Mr. Doakes' left arm at the crime scene.
- Constable George Crabtree: His left arm? Sergeant, why his left arm?
- Sargeant Jasper Linney: Because it was the largest part of Doakes still imtact.
- Inspector Thomas Brackenreid: What else do we have to go on?
- Detective William Murdoch: The killer's modus operandi: well-styled, well-rehearsed... murder with a personal touch.
- Inspector Thomas Brackenreid: The murderer's enjoyin' himself.
- Detective William Murdoch: I suppose.
- Constable George Crabtree: So, Fremont just walks away?
- Inspector Thomas Brackenreid: It's all part of a larger plan.
- Constable George Crabtree: [slightly bewildered] A plan, sir?
- Inspector Thomas Brackenreid: Crabtree, Murdoch isn't the only one around here who can think like Murdoch, eh?
- Constable George Crabtree: If you say so, sir.