You may find this hard to believe, Madame Kozlova, but Paddington is innocent. And we think that the real thief may have broken into Mr Gruber's just to steal your great-grandmother's pop-up book. - The pop-up book? - I know it sounds far-fetched. But is there anything you could tell us about that book? Anything at all could be helpful.
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You see, my great-grandmother, who started this fair, was the finest show woman of her generation. She could tame lions, breathe fire, swallow swords. But she was most famous... for the trapeze.
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- They called her the Flying Swan. - Bravo! Wherever she went, she was showered with gifts, and made a fortune. But where there is a fortune, there is also jealousy. The magician wanted it for himself.
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I think there's more to him than meets the eye. I think he somehow knew the story of the Koslova fortune and is out there right now trying to find it.
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I'll show you where it all happened.
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- That's quite a story. - Oh, really?
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Enter Sister Isabella.
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Come with me.
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Come on, put your back into it. Oh!
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Ooh, that's heavy.
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20.2s
Three juicy oranges. - Four juicy... - Now what are you doing? Taking them one at a time. One sack at a time! I'm sorry. I'm finding this a very stressful working environment. - Aunt Lucy said... - Aunt Lucy! - I've had it up to here with Aunt Lucy! - Oh! She sounds like a proper old bag to me.
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Orange squeezers? Good. No. Better. Tomato. Lovely. Yes. Spot on. Now, we have to be very careful with knives. Aunt Lucy said that sensible bears...
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These sacks are awfully heavy. - Well, take them one at a time, then. - Right. One at a... ...time. One juicy orange. Two juicy oranges.
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I said... your Aunt Lucy sounds like one of the most naive, gullible, mushy-brained...