e18 Chinatown













					  CHINATOWN
					      by
					 Robert Towne


















					  THIRD DRAFT
					October 9, 1973







1	FULL SCREEN PHOTOGRAPH

	grainy but unmistakably a man and woman making love.
	Photograph shakes. SOUND of a man MOANING in anguish.
	The photograph is dropped, REVEALING ANOTHER, MORE 
	compromising one. Then another, and another. More moans.

					CURLY'S VOICE
				(crying out)
			Oh, no.

2	INT. GITTES' OFFICE

	CURLY drops the photos on Gittes' desk. Curly towers
	over GITTES and sweats heavily through his workman's
	clothes, his breathing progressively more labored. A
	drop plunks on Gittes' shiny desk top.

	Gittes notes it. A fan whiffs overhead. Gittes glances
	up at it. He looks cool and brisk in a white linen suit
	despite the heat. Never taking his eyes off Curly, he
	lights a cigarette using a lighter with a "nail" on
	his desk.

	Curly, with another anguished sob, turns and rams his
	fist into the wall, kicking the wastebasket as he does.
	He starts to sob again, slides along the wall where his
	fist has left a noticeable dent and its impact has sent
	the signed photos of several movie stars askew.

	Curly slides on into the blinds and sinks to his knees.
	He is weeping heavily now, and is in such pain that he
	actually bites into the blinds.

	Gittes doesn't move from his chair.

					GITTES
			All right, enough is enough --
			you can't eat the Venetian
			blinds, Curly. I just had
			'em installed on Wednesday.

	Curly responds slowly, rising to his feet, crying. Gittes
	reaches into his desk and pulls out a shot glass, quickly
	selects a cheaper bottle of bourbon from several fifths
	of more expensive whiskeys.

3	Gittes pours a large shot. He shoves the glass across
	his desk toward Curly.

					GITTES
			-- Down the hatch.

	Curly stares dumbly at it. Then picks it up, and drains
	it. He sinks back into the chair opposite Gittes, begins
	to cry quietly.

					CURLY
				(drinking, relaxing
				 a little)
			She's just no good.

					GITTES
			What can I tell you, Kid?
			You're right. When you're
			right, you're right, and
			you're right.

					CURLY
			-- Ain't worth thinking about.

	Gittes leaves the bottle with Curly.

					GITTES
			You're absolutely right, I
			wouldn't give her another
			thought.

					CURLY
				(pouring himself)
			You know, you're okay, Mr. Gittes.
			I know it's your job, but you're
			okay.

					GITTES
				(settling back,
				 breathing a little
				 easier)
			Thanks, Curly. Call me Jake.

					CURLY
			Thanks. You know something, 
			Jake?

					GITTES
			What's that, Curly?

					CURLY
			I think I'll kill her.

4	INT. DUFFY & WALSH'S OFFICE

	noticeably less plush than Gitte's. A well-groomed,
	dark-haired WOMAN sits nervously between their two desks,
	fiddling with the veil on her pillbox hat.

					WOMAN
			-- I was hoping Mr. Gittes could
			see to this personally --

					WALSH
				(almost the manner
				 of someone
				 comforting the
				 bereaved)
			-- If you'll allow us to complete
			our preliminary questioning, by
			then he'll be free.

	There is the SOUND of ANOTHER MOAN coming from Gittes'
	Office -- something made of glass shatters. The Woman
	grows more edgy.

5	INT. GITTES' OFFICE - GITTES & CURLY

	Gittes and Curly stand in front of the desk, Gittes
	staring contemptuously at the heavy breathing hulk
	towering over him. Gittes takes a handkerchief and
	wipes away the plunk of perspiration on his desk.

					CURL
190
Y
				(crying)
			They don't kill a guy for that.

					GITTES
			Oh they don't?

					CURLY
			Not for your wife. That's the
			unwritten law.

6	Gittes pounds the photos on the desk, shouting;

					GITTES
			I'll tell you the unwritten law,
			you dumb son of a bitch, you
			gotta be rich to kill somebody,
			anybody and get away with it.
			You think you got that kind
			of dough, you think yo
fa0
u got
			that kind of class?

	Curly shrinks back a little.

					CURLY

			... No...

					GITTES
			You bet your ass you don't. You
			can't even pay me off.

	This seems to upset Curly even more.

					CURLY
			I'll pay the rest next trip --
			we only caught sixty ton of
			skipjack around San Benedict.
			We hit a chubasco, they don't
			pay you for skipjack the way
			they do for tuna or albacore --

					GITTES
			(easing him out of
			 his office)
			Forget it. I only mention it to
			illustrate a point...

7	INT. OFFICE RECEPTION

	He's now walking him past SOPHIE who pointedly averts her
	gaze. He opens the door where on the pebbled glass can
	be read: J. J. GITTES and Associates - DISCREET
	INVESTIGATION.

					GITTES
			I don't want your last dime.

	He throws an arm around Curly and flashes a dazzling 
	smile.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			What kind of guy do you
			think I am?

					CURLY 
			Thanks, Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
			Call me Jake. Careful driving 
			home, Curly.

	He shuts the door on him and the smile disappears.

8	He shakes his head, starting to swear under his breath.

					SOPHIE
			-- A Mrs. Mulwray is waiting for
			you, with Mr. Walsh and Mr. Duffy.

	Gittes nods, walks on in.

9	INT. DUFFY AND WALSH'S OFFICE

	Walsh rises when Gittes enters.

					WALSH
			Mrs. Mulwray, may I present Mr.
			Gittes?

	Gittes walks over to her and again flashes a warm,
	sympathetic smile.

					GITTES
			How do you do, Mrs. Mulwray?

					MRS. MULWRAY
			Mr. Gittes...

					GITTES
			Now, Mrs. Mulwray, what seems to
			be the problem?

	She holds her breath. The revelation isn't easy for her.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			My husband, I believe, is seeing
			another woman.

	Gittes looks mildly shocked. He turns for confirmation
	to his two partners.

					GITTES
				(gravely)
			No, really?

					MRS. MULWRAY
			I'm afraid so.

					GITTES
			I am sorry.

	Gittes pulls up a chair sitting next to Mrs. Mulwray --
	between Duffy and Walsh. Duffy cracks his gum.

	Gittes gives him an irritated glance.
	Duffy stops chewing.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			Can't we talk about this alone,
			Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
			I'm afraid not, Mrs. Mulwray.
			These men are my operatives and
			at some point they're going to
			assist me. I can't do everything
			myself.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			Of course not.

					GITTES
			Now -- what makes you certain he
			is involved with someone?

	Mrs. Mulwray hesitates. She seems uncommonly nervous 
	at the question.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			-- a wife can tell.

	Gittes sighs.

					GITTES
			Mrs. Mulwray, do you love your
			husband?

					MRS. MULWRAY 
				(shocked)
			... Yes of course.

					GITTES
				(deliberately)
			Then go home and forget about it.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			-- but...

					GITTES
				(staring intently at
				 her)
			I'm sure he loves you, too. You
			know the expression, let sleeping
			dogs lie? You're better off not
			knowing.

					MRS. MULWRAY
				(with some real
				 anxiety)
			But I have to know.

	Her intensity is genuine. Gittes looks to his two 
	partners.

					GITTES
			All right, what's your husband's
			first name?

					MRS. MULWRAY
			Hollis. Hollis Mulwray.

					GITTES
				(visibly surprised)
			-- Water and Power?

	Mrs. Mulwray nods, almost shyly. Gittes is now casually
	but carefully checking out the detailing of Mrs. 
	Mulwray's dress -- her handbag, shoes, etc.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			-- he's the Chief Engineer.

					DUFFY
				(a little eagerly)
			-- Chief Engineer?

11	Gittes' glance tells Duffy Gittes wants to do the 
	questioning. Mrs. Mulwray nods.

					GITTES
				(confidentially)
			This type of investigation can
			be hard on your pocketbook, Mrs.
			Mulwray. It takes time.

					MRS. MULWRAY
			Money doesn't matter to me, Mr.
			Gittes.

	Gittes sighs.

					GITTES
			Very well. We'll see what we
			can do.

12	EXT. CITY HALL - MORNING

	already shimmering with heat.

	A drunk blows his nose with his fingers into the fountain
	at the foot of the steps
190
.

	Gittes, impeccably dressed, passes the drunk on the way
	up the stairs.

13	INT. COUNCIL CHAMBERS

	Former Mayor SAM BAGBY is speaking. Behind him is a huge
	map, with overleafs and bold lettering:

		"PROPOSED ALTO VALLEJO DAM AND RESERVOIR"

	Some of the councilmen are reading funny papers and 
	gossip columns while Bagby is speaking.

					BAGBY
			-- Gentlemen, today you can walk
			out th
fa0
at door, turn right, hop on
			a streetcar and in twenty-five
			minutes end up smack in the Pacific
			Ocean. Now you can swim in it, you
			can fish in it, you can sail in
			it - but you can't drink it, you
			can't water your lawns with it,
			you can't irrigate an orange grove
			with it. Remember -- we live next
			door to the ocean but we also live
			on the edge of the desert. Los
			Angeles is a desert community.
			Beneath this building, beneath
			every street there's a desert.
			Without water the dust will rise
			up and cover us as though we'd
			never existed!
				(pausing, letting
				 the implication
				 sink in)

14	CLOSE - GITTES

	sitting next to some grubby farmers, bored. He yawns --
	edges away from one of the dirtier farmers.

					BAGBY(O.S.)
				(continuing)
			The Alto Vallejo can save us from
			that, and I respectfully suggest
			that eight and a half million
			dollars is a fair price to pay to
			keep the desert from our streets
			-- and not on top of them.

15	AUDIENCE - COUNCIL CHAMBERS

	An amalgam of farmers, businessmen, and city employees
	have been listening with keen interest. A couple of the
	farmers applaud. Somebody shooshes them.

16	COUNCIL COMMITTEE

	in a whispered conference.

					COUNCILMAN
				(acknowledging Bagby)
			-- Mayor Bagby... let's hear from
			the departments again -- I suppose
			we better take Water and Power
			first. Mr. Mulwray.

17	REACTION - GITTES

	looking up with interest from his racing form.

18	MULWRAY

	walks to the huge map with overleafs. He is a slender
	man in his sixties, who wears glasses and moves with
	surprising fluidity. He turns to a smaller, younger
	man, and nods. The man turns the overleaf on the map.

					MULWRAY
			In case you've forgotten, gentlemen,
			over five hundred lives were lost
			when the Van der Lip Dam gave way
			-- core samples have shown that
			beneath this bedrock is shale
			similar to the permeable shale
			in the Van der Lip disaster.
			It couldn't withstand that kind
			of pressure there.
				(referring to a new
				 overleaf)
			Now you propose yet another dirt
			banked terminus dam with slopes
			of two and one half to one, one
			hundred twelve feet high and a
			twelve thousand acre water surface.
			Well, it won't hold. I won't
			build it. It's that simple -- I
			am not making that kind of mistake
			twice. Thank you, gentlemen.

	Mulwray leaves the overleaf board and sits down. Suddenly
	there are some whoops and hollers from the rear of the
	chambers and a red-faced FARMER drives in several
	scrawny, bleating sheep. Naturally, they cause 
	a commotion.

					COUNCIL PRESIDENT
				(shouting to farmer)
			What in the hell do you think you're
			doing?
				(as the sheep bleat
				 down the aisles
				 toward the Council)
			Get those goddam things out of here!

					FARMER
				(right back)
			Tell me where to take them! You don't
			have an answer for that so quick, do
			you?

19	Bailiffs and sergeants-at-arms respond to the
	imprecations of the Council and attempt to capture 
	the sheep and the farmers, having to restrain one who
	looks like he's going to bodily attack Mulwray.

					FARMER
				(through above, to
				 Mulwray)
			-- You steal the water from the
			valley, ruin the grazing, starve
			my livestock -- who's paying you
			to do that, .Mr. Mulwray, that's
			what I want to know!

20	OMITTED
&
21

22	L.A. RIVERBED - LONG SHOT

	It's virtually empty. Sun blazes off it's ugly concrete
	banks. Where the banks are earthen, they are parched
	and choked with weeds.

	After a moment, Mulwray's car pulls INTO VIEW on a flood
	control road about fifteen feet above the riverbed.
	Mulwray gets out of the car. Me looks around.

23	WITH GITTES

	holding a pair of binoculars, downstream and just above
	the flood control road -- using some dried mustard weeds
	for cover. he watches while Mulwray makes his way
	down to the center of the riverbed.

	There Mulwray stops, tuns slowly, appears to be looking
	at 
190
the bottom of the riverbed, or -- at nothing at all.

24	GITTES

	trains the binoculars on him. Sun glints off Mulwray's
	glasses.

25	BELOW GITTES
	There's the SOUND of something like champagne corks 
	popping. Then a small Mexican boy atop a swayback horse 
	rides it into the riverbed, and into Gitte's view.

26	MULWRAY

	himself stops, stands still when he hears the sound.
	Power lines and the 
fa0
sun are overhead, the trickle of
	brackish water at his feet.

	He moves swiftly downstream in the direction of the
	sound, toward Gittes.

27	GITTES

	moves a little further back as Mulwray rounds the bend
	in the river and comes face to face with the Mexican
	boy on the muddy banks. Mulwray says something to the boy.

	The boy doesn't answer at first. Mulwray points to the
	ground. The boy gestures. Mulwray frowns. He kneels
	down in the mud and stares at it. He seems to be
	concentrating on it.

28	After a moment, he rises, thanks the boy and heads swiftly
	back upstream -- scrambling up the bank to his car.

	There he reaches through the window and pulls out a roll
	of blueprints or something like them - he spreads them
	on the hood of his car and begins to scribble some notes,
	looking downstream from time to time.

	The power lines overhead HUM.

	He stops, listens to them -- then rolls up the plans and 
	gets back in the car. He drives off.

29	GITTES

	Hurries to get back to his car. He gets in and gets right 
	back out. The steamy leather burns him. He takes a 
	towel from the back seat and carefully places it on the 
	front one. He gets in and takes off.

30	OMITTED

31	POINT FERMIN PARK - DUSK

	Street lights go on.

32	MULWRAY

	pulls up, parks. Hurries out of the car, across the park 
	lawn and into the shade of some trees and buildings.

33	GITTES

	pulls up, moves across the park at a different angle, but 
	in the direction Mulwray had gone. He makes it through 
	the trees in time to see Mulwray scramble adroitly down 
	the side of the cliff to the beach below. Be seems in 
	a hurry. Gittes moves after him - having a little more 
	difficulty negotiating the climb than Mulwray did.

34	DOWN ON THE BEACH

	Gittes looks to his right - where the bay is a long,
	clear crescent. He looks to his left - there's a 
	promontory of sorts. It's apparent Mulwray has gone 
	that way. Gittes hesitates, then moves in that direction 
	-- but climbs along the promontory in order to be 
	above Mulwray.

35	AT THE OUTFALL

	Gittes spots Mulwray just below him, kicking at the sand.

	Mulwray picks up a starfish. Brushes the sand off it.
	Looks absently up toward Gittes.

36	GITTES

	backs away, sits near the outfall, yawns.

37	BEACON LIGHT AT POINT FERMIN

	flashing in the dust.

38	CLOSE - GITTES

	sitting, suddenly starts. He swears softly -- he's in
	a puddle of water and the seat of his trousers is wet.

39	MULWRAY

	below him in watching the water trickling down from 
	the outfall near Gittes.

	Mulwray stands and stares at the water, apparently 
	fascinated. Even as Gittes watches Mulwray watching, the 
	volume and velocity seem to increase until it gushes in 
	spurts, cascading into the sea, whipping it into a foam.

40	AT THE STREET - GITTES' CAR

	There's a slip of paper stuck under the windshield wiper. 
	Gittes pulls it off, gets in the car and turns on the 
	dash light. It says: "SAVE OUR CITY! LOS ANGELES IS 
	DYING OF THIRST! PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY! LOS ANGELES
	IS YOUR INVESTMENT IN THE FUTURE!!! VOTE YES NOVEMBER
	6......CITIZENS COMMITTEE TO SAVE OUR CITY, HON. SAM 
	BAGBY, FORMER MAYOR - CHAIRMAN." Gittes grumbles, 
	crumples it up and tosses it out the window. He notices
	other flyers parked on a couple of cars down the street.

	Gittes reaches down and opens his glove compartment.

41	INT. GLOVE COMPARTMENT

	consists of a small mountain of Ingersoll pocket watches.

	The cheap price tags are still on them. Gittes pulls 
	out one.

	He absently winds it, checks the time with his own watch. 
	It's 9:37 as he walks to .Mulwray's car and places it 
	behind the front wheel of Mulwray's car. He yawns again 
	and heads back to his own car.

42	GITTES

	arrives whistling, opens the door with "J.J. GITTES AND 
	ASSOCIATES - DISCREET INVESTIGATION" on it.

					GITTES 
			Morning, Sophie.

	Sophie hands him a small pile of messages. He goes 
	through them.

					GITTES
			Walsh here?

					SOPHIE 
			He's in the dark room
190
.

43	Gittes walks through his office to Duffy and Walsh's.
	A little red light is on in the corner, over a closed 
	door. Gittes walks over and knocks on the door.

					GITTES 
			Where'd he go yesterday?

					WALSH'S VOICE 
			Three reservoirs -- Men's room of 
			a Richfield gas station on Flower, 
			and the Pig 'n Whistle.

					GITTES
			Jesus Christ, this guy's really 
			got water on the
fa0
 brain.

					WALSH'S VOICE
			What'd you expect? That's his job.

					GITTES
			Listen, we can't string this broad 
			out indefinitely -- we got to come 
			up with something.

					WALSH'S VOICE 
			I think I got something.

					GITTES
			Oh yeah? You pick up the watch?

44	INT. DUFFY & WALSH'S OFFICE - GITTES

					WALSH'S VOICE
			It's on your desk. Say, you hear 
			the one about the guy who goes to 
			the North Pole with Admiral Byrd 
			looking for penguins?

	Gittes walks to his office.

45	ON HIS DESK

	is the Ingersoll watch, the crystal broken -- the hands 
	stopped at 2:47.

					GITTES 
			He was there all night.

	Gittes drops it, sits down. Walsh comes in carrying a 
	series of wet photos stuck with clothes pins onto a small 
	blackboard.

					GITTES
				(continuing; eagerly) 
			So what you got?

	Walsh shows him the photos. He looks at them. They are 
	a series outside a restaurant showing Mulwray with 
	another man whose appearance is striking. In two 
	of the photos a gnarled cane is visible.

					GITTES 
				(continuing; obviously
				 annoyed)
			This?

					WALSH
			They got into a terrific argument 
			outside the Pig 'n Whistle.

					GITTES
			What about?

					WALSH
			I don't know -- the traffic was 
			pretty loud. I only heard one 
			thing -- apple core.

					GITTES
			Apple core?

					WALSH
				(shrugs)
			Yeah.

46	INT. GITTES' OFFICE

	Gittes tosses down the photos in disgust.

					GITTES
			Jesus Christ, Walsh -- that's what 
			you spent your day doing?

					WALSH
			Look, you tell me to take pictures, 
			I take pictures.

					GITTES
			Let me explain something to you, 
			Walsh -- this business requires 
			a certain finesse --

	The PHONE has been RINGING. Sophie buzzes him.

					GITTES
			Yeah, Sophie?
				(he picks up the phone)
			Duffy, where are you?

	Duffy's VOICE can be HEARD, excitedly -- "I got it. I 
	got it. He's found himself some cute little twist -
	in a rowboat, in Echo Park."

					GITTES 
				(continuing)
			Okay, slow down -- Echo Park --
				(to Walsh)
			Jesus, water again.

47	WESTLAKE PARK (McARTHUR PARK)

	Duffy is rowing, Gittes seated in the stern.

	They pass Mulwray and a slender blonde girl in a summer 
	print dress, drifting in their rowboat, Mulwray fondly 
	doting on the girl.

					GITTES
				(to Duffy, as they
	 			 pass)
			Let's have a big smile, pal.

	He shoots past Duffy, expertly running off a couple of 
	fast shots. Mulwray and the girl seem blissfully 
	unaware of them.

48	DUFFY

	turns again and they row past Mulwray and the girl,
	Gittes again clicking off several fast shots.

49	CLOSE SHOT - SIGN:

				"EL MACANDO APARTMENTS"

	MOVE ALONG the red tiled roof and down to a lower level 
	of the roof where Gittes' feet are hooked over the apex 
	of the roof and Gittes himself is stretched face downward 
	on the tiles, pointing himself and his camera to a 
	veranda below him where the girl and Mulwray are eating. 
	Gittes is clicking off more shots when the tiles his 
	feet are hooked over come loose.

	Gittes begins a slow slide down the tile to the edge of 
	the roof -- and possibly over it to a three-story drop. 
	He tries to slow himself down. The loose tile also 
	begins to slide.

	Gittes stops himself at the roof's edge by the storm 
	drain and begins a very precarious turn - this time 
	hooking his feet in the drain itself. The loose tile 
	falls and hits the veranda below. He stops as it's about
	to slide over the edge. He carefully lays it in the 
	drain. But a fragment off the cracked edge of the tile falls.

50	WITH MULWRAY AND THE GIRL

	Mulwray staring at the fragment at his feet. He looks 
	to the girl. He's clearly concerned. He rises, looks up 
	to the roof.

51	FROM HIS POV

	The roof and the sign topping it betray nothing. He 
	slowly sits back down, staring at the tile fragment.

52	CLOSE SHOT - NEWSPAPER

	DEPARTMENT OF WATER AND POWER BLOWS FUSE OVER CHIEF'S 
	USE OF FUNDS FOR EL MACANDO LOVE NEST.

	In the style of
190
 the Hearst yellow press, there is a 
	heart-shaped drawing around one of the photos that 
	Gittes had taken. Next to it is a smaller column, 
	"J.J. Gittes hired by suspicious spouse."

53	INT. BARBERSHOP - GITTES

	holds the paper and reads while getting his haircut and 
	his shoes shined. In fact, almost all the customers 
	are reading papers.

					BARNEY
				(to Gittes)
			-- when you get so 
fa0
much publicity, 
			after a while you must get blasé
			about it.

	A self-satisfied smile comes to Gittes' face.

					BARNEY 
				(continuing) 
			Face it. You're practically 
			a movie star.

	In b.g., customers can be 0VERHEARD talking about the 
	drought. Interspersed with above, someone is saying, 
	"They're gonna start rationing water unless it rains." 
	Someone else says, "Only for washing your cars." Third 
	says, "You're not going to be able to water your lawn 
	either, or take a bath more than once a week." First 
	says, "If you don't have a lawn or a car, do you get an 
	extra bath?"

54	Gittes has been staring outside the barbershop. A car 
	is stalled. The hood is up. A man watches his 
	radiator boiling over.

					GITTES 
				(laughing)

			Look at that.

					BARNEY
			Heat's murder.

					OTHER CUSTOMER
				(end of conversation) 
			Fools names and fools faces...

55	Gittes has heard the word. He straightens up.

				GITTES 
			(smiling; to Other
				 Customer)
			What's that, pal?

					OTHER CUSTOMER 
				(indicating paper) 
			Nothing -- you got a hell of a 
			way to make a living.

					GITTES
			-- Oh? What do. you do to make 
			ends meet?

					OTHER CUSTOMER 
			Mortgage Department, First National Bank.

	Gittes laughs.

					GITTES
			Tell me, how many people a week 
			do you foreclose on?

					OTHER CUSTOMER
			We don't publish a record in the 
			paper, I can tell you that.

					GITTES
			Neither do I.

					OTHER CUSTOMER
			No, you have a press agent do it.

	Gittes gets out of the chair. Barney, a little concerned, 
	tries to restrain him, holding onto the barber sheet 
	around Gittes' neck.

					GITTES 
			Barney, who is this bimbo? He a
			regular customer?

					BARNEY 
			Take it easy, Jake.

					GITTES
			Look, pal -- I make an honest 
			living. People don't come to 
			me unless they're miserable and
			I help 'em out of a bad situation. 
			I don't kick them out of their 
			homes like you jerks who work in 
			the bank.

					BARNEY 
			Jake, for Christ's sake.

56	Gittes is trying to take off his sheet.

					GITTES
			C'mon, get out of the barber chair. 
			We'll go outside and talk this 
			over --

	The Customer is shrinking back into the chair.

					BARNEY
			Hey, c'mon, Jake. Sit down. Sit 
			down -- you hear about the fella 
			goes to his friend and says, 
			'What'll I do, I'm tired of 
			screwing my-wife?' and his 
			friend says, 'Whyn't you do 
			what the Chinese do?'

	Gittes allows himself to be tugged back to his chair.

					GITTES
			I don't know how that got in the
			paper as a matter of fact - it
			surprised me it was so quick.
			I make an honest living.

					BARNEY
			'Course you do, Jake.

					GITTES 
			An honest living.

					BARNEY 
				(continuing) 
			So anyway, he says, 'whyn't you 
			do what the Chinese do?'

57	INT. GITTES' OFFICE

	Gittes comes bursting in, slapping a newspapers on his 
	thigh.

					GITTES
			Duffy, Walsh --

	Walsh comes out of his office, Duffy out of the other
	one.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Sophie -- go to the little girl's
			room for a minute.

					SOPHIE 
			But, Mr. Gittes --


					GITTES 
				(insisting)
			Sophie.

					SOPHIE 
			Yes, Mr. Gittes.

	She gets up and leaves.

					GITTES
			-- so there's this fella who's 
			tired of screwing his wife --

					DUFFY
			Jake, listen -

					GITTES
			Shut up, Duffy, you're always in 
			a hurry - and his friend says why 
			not do what-the Chinese do? So he 
			says what do they do? His friend 
			says the Chinese they screw for a 
			while -- just listen a second, 
			Duffy --

	A stunning YOUNG WOMAN appears behind Gittes in his 
	doorway. She's shortly joined by a small, GRAY-HAIRED
	MAN. They listen, unseen by Gittes.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			-- and then they stop and they 
			read a little Confucius and they 
			screw some more and they stop and 
			they smoke some opium and then 
			they go back and screw some more 
			and they stop again and 
190
they 
			contemplate the moon or something 
			and it makes it more exciting. 
			So this other guy goes home to 
			screw his wife and after a while 
			he stops and gets up and goes into 
			the other room only he reads Life 
			Magazine and he goes back and he 
			screws some more and suddenly says 
			excuse me a second and he gets up 
			and smokes a cigarette and he goes 
			back and by this
fa0
 time his wife is 
			getting sore as hell. So he screws 
			some more and then he gets up to look 
			at the moon and his wife says, 'What 
			the hell do you think you're doing?
			(Gittes breaks up)
			... you're screwing like a Chinaman.'

58	Gittes hangs onto Sophie's desk laughing his ass off. 
	The little Gray-Haired Man winces. When Gittes looks 
	up he sees the Young Woman, apparently in her late 
	twenties. She's so stunning that Gittes nearly gasps.

					YOUNG WOMAN
			Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
			Yes?

					YOUNG WOMAN
			Do you know me?

					GITTES
			-- well -- I think I -- I 
			would've remembered.

					YOUNG WOMAN 
			Have we ever met?

					GITTES
			Well, no.

					YOUNG WOMAN
			Never?

					GITTES
			Never.

					YOUNG WOMAN
			That's what I thought. You see, 
			I'm Mrs. Evelyn Mulwray -- you 
			know, Mr. Mulwray's wife.

59	Gittes is staggered. He glances down at the newspaper.

					GITTES
			Not that Mulwray?

					EVELYN
			Yes, that Mulwray, Mr. Gittes. And 
			since you agree with me we've never 
			met, you must also agree that I 
			haven't hired you to do anything -
			certainly not spy on my husband.
			I see you like publicity, Mr. 
			Gittes. Well, you're going to 
			get it -

					GITTES
			Now wait a minute, Mrs. Mulwray...

	She's walked past him toward the door. He stop her.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			-- there's some misunderstanding 
			here. It's not going to do any 
			good to get tough with me --

	Evelyn flashes a cold smile.

					EVELYN
			I don't get tough with anybody, 
			Mr. Gittes. My lawyer does.

	Evelyn starts out the door and Gittes starts after her. 
	This time he's stopped by the Gray-Haired Man who has 
	also come out of his office and up behind him.

					GRAY-HAIRED MAN 
			Here's something for you, Mr. 
			Gittes --

	Gittes turns to be handed a thick sheaf of papers, a 
	summons and complaint. Evelyn walks out the door.

					GRAY-HAIRED MAN
				(continuing;
				 pleasantly)
			I suppose we'll be hearing from 
			your attorney.

	Gittes stares down at the papers in his hand.

60	INT. GITTES' INNER OFFICE - GITTES, DUFFY & WALSH

	On Gittes' desk. there are empty coffee cups, the summons 
	and complaint -- and the newspaper Gittes had brought 
	with him from the barber shop.

	The three men are sitting, worn and silent. Walsh 
	chewing gum is the loudest noise in the room.

	Gittes looks to Walsh with obvious irritation. Walsh
	stops chewing.

	Duffy puts out a cigarette in the dregs of one of the 
	coffee cups.

					GITTES
				(to Duffy)
			There's seven ashtrays in this 
			room, Duffy.

					DUFFY
			Okay.

					GITTES 
			That's a filthy habit.

					DUFFY 
			I said okay,. Jake.

					GITTES
			Yeah, yeah -- if she'd come in 
			here saying she was Shirley Temple 
			you'd say okay to that, too.

					WALSH
			Look, Jake -- she gave us Mulwray's
			real phone number and address --

					GITTES
			All she needed for that was the 
			phone book!

					WALSH
			No, no -- she said not to call, 
			her husband might answer.

					GITTES
			-- when I find out who that phony 
			bitch was --

	Gittes is staring down at the newspaper. He suddenly 
	grabs the phone, begins dialing. A tight little smile 
	breaks out on his face. He buzzes Sophie.

					GITTES
			Sophie.

					SOPHIE 
			Yes, Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
			Get me the Times -- Whitey
			Mehrholtz --
				(as he waits)
			And how about that snotty broad?
				(the phone to his
				 ear)
			What does she think, she's perfect? 
			Coming in waving her lawyers and 
			her money at me -- so goddam smug. 
			She's no better than anybody else 
			in this town --

	Sophie BUZZES.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Whitey, what's new, pal?... Yeah, 
			listen, where did you get those 
			photographs... Yeah, blowing a 
			fuse over the El Macando love 
			nest -- that's cute, Whitey... 
			so who sent them to you... I 
			sent them?
				(Gittes laughs a
				 little hysterically)
			Why would I be asking how you g
190
ot 
			them if I sent them?... Whitey?... 
			Whitey?... C'mon, level with me 
			for once, my tit's in the wringer 
			and it's beginning to hurt... 
			yeah... yeah -- yeah.

	He hangs up.

					WALSH
			So he says you sent them?

					GITTES
				(after a moment)
			-- they're all a bunch of phonies.

61	OMITTED

62	INT. DEPARTMENT WATER & POWER - HALL 

	Gittes stops outside a door marked:

			
fa0
	HOLLIS J. MULWRAY
				 CHIEF ENGINEER

63	He enters an outer office. The SECRETARY looks surprised.

					GITTES
			Mr. Mulwray, please.

					SECRETARY
			He's not in, Mr. -

					GITTES
			Gittes.

					SECRETARY
			May I ask what this is regarding?

					GITTES
			It's personal. Has he been out long?

					SECRETARY
			Since lunch.

					GITTES
			Gee whiz --
				(he glances at his
				 watch)
			-- and I'm late.

					SECRETARY 
			He was expecting you?

					GITTES 
			Fifteen minutes ago. Why don't 
			I go in and wait?

	Without waiting for a response, he does. The Secretary 
	half rises in protest but Gittes is through the inner 
	door.

64	MULWRAY'S INNER OFFICE

	The walls are covered with commendation, photos of 
	Mulwray at various construction sites, large maps of 
	watershed areas and reservoirs in the city. On the 
	desk is a framed, tinted photo of Evelyn in riding 
	clothes.

	Gittes moves to the desk, watching the translucent pane 
	in the upper half of the door leading to the outer 
	office as he does.

	He begins to open and close. the desk drawers after 
	quickly examining the top. He tries one of the drawers 
	and it doesn't open. He reopens the top drawer, and 
	the bottom one opens.

	He looks in it, pulls out a checkbook. He opens it --
	riffles through the stubs like he was shuffling cards. 
	Drops it -- finds a set of keys, an old phone book, and 
	a menu from a Water Department lunch at the Biltmore 
	Hotel in 1913. Then, Gittes hauls out the blueprints 
	that Mulwray had laid across the hood of his car --
	they read in bold type: WATERSHED AND DRAINAGE SYSTEM 
	FOR THE LOS ANGELES BASIN.

	He flips through them -- reads one notation in Mulwray's 
	neat hand: "Tues. night. Oak Pass Res. - 7 channels 
	used."

	Gittes spots a shadow looming in front of the translucent 
	pane. He quickly tosses item after item back, kneeing 
	the drawer -- nearly knocking a spare pair of Mulwray's 
	glasses off the desk top when he does. He catches them, 
	puts them on the desk and is pacing the room as the 
	door opens.

65	RUSS YELBURTON

	enters the room. An anxious Secretary is right behind 
	him.



					YELBURTON
			Can I help you?
				(extending his hand)
			Russ Yelburton, Deputy Chief in 
			the Department.

					GITTES
				(equally pleasant) 
			J.J. Gittes -- and it's not a 
			departmental matter.
	
					YELBURTON
			I wonder if you'd care to wait 
			in my office?

	This is more a request than an invitation. Gittes nods, 
	follows Yelburton out, through the outer office to his 
	offices down the hall.

					YELBURTON 
				(continuing; as
				 they're going)
			You see -- this whole business 
			in the paper with Mr. Mulwray 
			has us all on edge --

66	INT. YELBURTON OFFICE

	Smaller than Mulwray's, he has most noticeably a 
	lacquered marlin mounted on the wall. There are a couple
	of other pictures of Yelburton with yellowtail and other
	fish he's standing beside.

	There's also a small burgee of a fish with the initials 
	A.C. below it, tacked onto the wall.

					YELBURTON
			After all, you work with a man 
			for a certain length of time, 
			you come to know him, his habits, 
			his values, and so forth -- well 
			either he's the kind who chases 
			after women or he isn't.

					GITTES 
			And Mulwray isn't?

					YELBURTON
			He never even kids about it.

					GITTES
			Maybe he takes it very seriously.

67	Gittes winks. Yelburton chuckles appreciatively,
	loosening up a little.

					GITTES
			You don't happen to know where
			Mr. Mulwray's having lunch?

					YELBURTON
			I'm sorry, I --

					GITTES
			Well, tell him I'll be back.

	Gittes spots a card tray on Yelburton's desk.

					GITTES 
				(continuing)
			-- Mind if I take one of your 
			cards? In case I want to get 
			in touch with you again.

					YELBURTON
			Help yourself.

68	Gittes fishes a couple off the tray, puts them in his 
	handkerchief pocket. He goes out the door, nearly running 
	into a man who is standing by the Secre
190
tary's desk -
	about GITTES' age only a head taller and a foot wider, 
	dressed in a plain suit that fits him about as well as 
	a brown paper bag.

					GITTES 
			Mulvihlll, what are you doing 
			here?

69	OUTER OFFICE - YELBURTON, MULVIHILL AND GITTES

	MULVIHILL stares at Gittes with unblinking eyes, remains 
	by the desk.

					MULVIHILL
			They shut my water off, what's 
			it to you?

				
fa0
	GITTES
			How'd you find out? You don't 
			drink it, you don't take a bath 
			in it, maybe they sent you a 
			letter. Ah, but then you'd have 
			to be able to read.

	Mulvihill moves toward Gittes, shaking with fury. 
	Yelburton steps between them.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Relax, Mulvihill, glad to see you.
				(to Yelburton)
			Do you know Claude Mulvihill here?

					YELBURTON
			Hope so. He's working for us.

73	EXT. MULWRAY HOUSE - GITTES

	rings the bell. He waits.

	A powerful CHINESE BUTLER with heavy hair and a half-
	jacket of gold on one front tooth, answers the door.

					GITTES
			J.J. Gittes to see Mr. Mulwray.

	He hands the Chinese Butler a card from his wallet. The 
	Butler takes it and disappears, leaving Gittes standing 
	in the doorway.

	Gittes stands, and sweats, watching a Japanese GARDENER 
	trim a hedge. There's a SQUEAKING SOUND. Gittes moves 
	a few feet off the porch.

74	POV - GARAGE

	A chauffeur is washing down a cream-colored Packard with 
	a chamois. Steam rises off the hood. The squeaking has 
	obviously come from the chamois.

75	CHINESE BUTLER
	in doorway.

					CHINESE BUTLER
			Please.

	Gittes looks behind him. The Chinese Butler is gesturing 
	for him to follow.

76	THROUGH THE HOUSE - GITTES

	follows him, trying to check out the rooms as he goes. 
	A maid is cleaning in the den. They pass through it out 
	some French doors along a trellised walkway to a large 
	pond with running water.

					CHINESE BUTLER 
			You wait, please.

77	Gittes is left standing by the pond. It's suddenly very 
	quiet except for the runnning water. The pond is over-
	flowing. After a moment, the Gardener comes running back.
	He smiles at Gittes, probes into the pond.

	There's something gleaming in the bottom of it. Gittes 
	notes it. After a moment, the Gardener drops the long 
	probe -- the waters recede.

78	EXT. POND - GITTES AND JAPANESE GARDENER - DAY

					GARDENER
					(to Gittes) 
			Bad for glass.

					GITTES
					(not understanding) 
			Yeah sure. Bad for glass.

	The Gardener nods, and is off, leaving Gittes staring at 
	the object in the bottom of the pond that is gleaming.

	He looks at the tool the Gardener was using, hesitates, 
	picks .it up and starts to probe into the pond himself, 
	toward the gleaming object.

	He then spots Evelyn rounding a turn, coming down the
	trellised pathway. He casually belts the probe, holds
	onto it for poise.

	Evelyn is wearing jeans that are lathered white on the 
	inside of the thighs and laced with brown horsehair.

	She's wearing riding boots, is perspiring a little, but 
	looks younger than she did in the office.

					EVELYN
			Yes, Mr. Gittes?

	Gittes is a little taken aback at seeing Evelyn. He is 
	annoyed as well. Nevertheless, he is elaborately polite.

					GITTES
			Actually, I'm here to see your
			husband, Mrs. Mulwray.

	He laughs. a little nervously. He waits for a reply.
	There is none. The Chinese Butler appears on the veranda.

					EVELYN
			Would you like something to drink?

					GITTES 
			What are you having?

					EVELYN
			Iced tea.

					GITTES 
			Yeah -- fine, thank you.

	Chinese Butler nods, disappears

79	EXT. POND AND GARDEN - MULWRAY HOUSE - DAY

	Evelyn sits at a glass-topped table. Gittes Joins her.

					EVELYN
			My husband's at the office.

					GITTES
			Actually he's not. And he's moved 
			from his apartment at the El Macando.

					EVELYN 
				(sharply)
			That's not his apartment.

					GITTES
			Anyway I -- the point is, Mrs. 
			Mulwray, I'm not in business to
			be loved, but I am in business, 
			and believe me, whoever set up 
			your husband, set me up. L.A.'s 
			a small town, people talk --

	He waits for a response. Then:

					GITTES
				(continuing;
				 uneasily)
			I'm just trying to make a living, 
			and I don't want to become a 
			local Joke -

					EVELYN
			Mr. Gittes, you've talked me into 
			it. I'll drop the lawsuit.

					GITTES
			What ?

					EVELYN
			I said I'll drop it.


190
	The iced tea comes on a tray which Ramon sets down 
	between them.

					EVELYN
				(continuing;
				 pleasantly)
			-- so let's just -- drop the 
			whole thing. Sugar? Lemon --

					GITTES
			Mrs. Mulwray?

					EVELYN
				(as she's mixing
				 one of the drinks) 
			-- Yes, Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
			I don't want to drop it.

80	Evelyn looks up. Gittes smiles a little sheepishly.

					GITTE
fa0
S
			I should talk this over with your 
			husband.

					EVELYN
				(a little concerned) 
			Why?... What on earth for? 
			Look, Hollis seems to think 
			you're an innocent man.

					GITTES
			Well, I've been accused of many 
			things, Mrs. Mulwray, but never 
			that.

	Again he laughs a little nervously. Again no reaction.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			You see, somebody went to a lot
			of trouble here, and I want to
			find out, lawsuit or no lawsuit.
			I'm not the one who's supposed to
			be caught with my pants down...
			so I'd like to see your husband --
			unless that's a problem.

					EVELYN
				(with a slight edge) 
			What do you mean?

					GITTES
			May I speak frankly, Mrs. Mulwray?

					EVELYN
			You may if you can, Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
				(determined to be
				 polite)
			-- Well, that little girlfriend, 
			she was attractive -- in a cheap 
			sort of way of course -- she's 
			disappeared. Maybe they disappeared 
			together somewhere.

					EVELYN
				(with rising anger) 
			Suppose they did. How does it 
			concern you?

					GITTES
			-- Nothing personal, Mrs. Mulwray, 
			I just --

					EVELYN
			It's very personal. It couldn't 
			be more personal. Is this a 
			business or an obsession with you?

					GITTES
			Look at it this way -- Now this 
			phony broad, excuse the language, 
			says she's you, she's hired me. 
			Whoever put her up to it, didn't 
			have anything against me. They 
			were out to get your husband. 
			Now if I see him, I can help him 
			did you talk this morning?

81	Evelyn brushes lightly at the horsehair on her Jeans.

					EVELYN
			-- No. I went riding rather early --

					GITTES
			-- Looks Like you went quite a 
			distance --

					EVELYN
			No, Just riding bareback, that's 
			all. Anyway, you might try the
			Oak Pass or Stone Canyon Reservoirs 
			-- sometimes at lunch Hollis takes 
			walks around them -- otherwise he'll 
			be home by 6:30.

					GITTES
			I'll stop by.

					EVELYN 
			Please call first.

	Gittes nods.

82.	EXT. OAK PASS RESERVOIR - DAY

	Gittes drives up a winding road, following a flood 
	channel up into the parched hills.

83 	TWO FIRE TRUCKS

	one a rescue truck, are at the entrance to the reservoir.

	The chain link fence with its KEEP OUT sign is open and 
	there are people milling around. The reservoir is below.

	Gittes' car is stopped by a couple of UNIFORMED POLICE.

					GUARD
			Sorry, this is closed to the 
			public, sir.

	Gittes hesitates only a moment, then:

					GITTES
				(to the Guard)
			It's all right -- Russ Yelburton, 
			Deputy Chief in the Department.

	He fishes out one of Yelburton's cards from his 
	handkerchief pocket -- hands it to the Guard.

					GUARD 
			Sorry, Mr. Yelburton. Go on down.

84 	Gittes drives past the Guards, through the gate, along 
	the reservoir. He spots a police car and an unmarked
	one as well.

	Gittes stops and gets out of the car. Several men with 
	their backs turned, one talking quietly, staring down 
	into the reservoir where other men in small skiffs are 
	apparently dredging for something.

	One of the men turns and sees Gittes. He recognizes
	Gittes and is visibly shocked.

					LOACH
			Gittes -- for Chrissakes --

					GITTES
			Loach --

					LOACH
				(moving to Gittes,
				 taking him by the
 				 arm)
			-- C'mon, get out of here before --

85	EXT. RESERVOIR - DAY

	Loach tries to ease him down the path.

					GITTES
			Before what? What the hell's
			going on?

	At the sound of his raised voice, a man standing at the 
	edge of the channel, talking to two boys in swimming 
	trunks, turns around. He's a tall, sleek Mexican in 
	his early thirties, LUIS ESC0BAR.

	Both Gittes and Escobar register considerable surprise 
	at seeing one another. The men around them are extremely 
	uneasy.

	Loach is actually sweating. Finally, Escobar smiles.

					ESCOBAR 
			Hello, Jake.

					GITTES
				(without smiling)
			How are you, Lou?

					ESCOBAR
			-- I have a cold I can't
190
 seem to 
			shake but other than that, I'm 
			fine.

					GITTES 
			Summer colds are the worst.

					ESCOBAR 
			Yeah, they are.

	Gittes reaches into his pocket, pulls out his cigarette
	case.

					A FIREMAN
			No smoking, sir -- it's a fire 
			hazard this time of year --

					ESCOBAR
			I think we can make an exception 
			-- I'll see he's careful with the 
			matches.

					GITTES
				(l
fa0
ighting up) 
			Thanks, Lou.

					ESCOBAR
			How'd you get past the guards?

					GITTES
			Well, to tell you the truth, I 
			lied a little.

86	Escobar nods. They walk a couple of steps -- the other 
	police -- two plainclothesmen and a uniformed officer 
	watch them.

					ESCOBAR
			You've done well by yourself.

					GITTES
			I get by.

					ESCOBAR
			Well, sometimes it takes a while 
			for a man to find himself and I 
			guess you have.

					LOACH
			Poking around in other people's 
			dirty linen.

					GITTES
			Yeah. Tell me. You still throw 
			Chinamen into jail for spitting 
			on the laundry?

					ESCOBAR
			You're behind the times, Jake --
			they've got steam irons now --
				(smiles)
			And I'm out of Chinatown.


					GITTES
			Since when?

					ESCOBAR
			Since I made Lieutenant --

	It's apparent Gittes is impressed despite himself.

					GITTES 
			Congratulations.

					ESCOBAR
			Uh-huh -- so what are you doing 
			here?

					GITTES 
			Looking for someone.

					ESCOBAR
			Who?

					GITTES
			Hollis Mulwray. You seen him?

					ESCOBAR
			Oh yes.

					GITTES 
			I'd like to talk to him.

					ESCOBAR 
			You're welcome to try. There he is.

87	Escobar points down to the reservoir -- a couple of men 
	using poles with hooks are fishing about in the water. 
	It can be SEEN that one of them has hooked something.

	He shouts. The other man hooks it, too. They pull, 
	revealing the soaking back of a man's coat -- they start 
	to pull the body into the skiff.

86	INT. CORONER'S OFFICE - EVELYN AND ESCOBAR

	are standing over the body of Mulwray. Escobar has the 
	sheet drawn back. Evelyn nods.

	Escobar drops the sheet. Escobar and Evelyn move a 
	few feet to one side and whisper, almost as though they 
	were trying to keep the corpse from hearing them.

					ESCOBAR
			-- It looks like he was washed 
			the entire length of the runoff 
			channel -- could he swim?

					EVELYN
			Of course.

					ESCOBAR
			-- Obviously the fall must have 
			knocked him out --

	Evelyn nods slightly Escobar coughs. A coroner's 
	assistant wheels the body out of the office.

					ESCOBAR 
				(continuing)
			-- This alleged affair he was 
			having -- the publicity didn't 
			make him morose or unhappy?

89	OUTSIDE THE CORONER'S

	Gittes has been sitting on a wooden bench, smoking and 
	listening. At this question, he rises and looks through 
	the doorway.

9O	Escobar sees him, ignores him. Evelyn doesn't see him.

					EVELYN
			... Well, it didn't make him 
			happy...

					ESCOBAR
			But there is no possibility he 
			would have taken his own life?

					EVELYN 
				(sharply)
			No.

					ESCOBAR
				(a little uncomfortably
				 now)
			Mrs. Mulwray, do you happen to know
			the name of the young woman in
			question?

	Evelyn shows a flash of annoyance.

					EVELYN
			No.

					ESCOBAR
			Do you know where she might be?

					EVELYN
			Certainly not!

	Escobar and Evelyn move slowly toward the door.

					ESCOBAR
			You and your husband never
			discussed her?

					EVELYN.
				(stopping, faltering)
			He... we did... he wouldn't tell
			me her name. We quarreled over
			her... of course -- it came as a
			complete surprise to me --

					ESCOBAR
			A complete surprise?

					EVELYN
			-- Yes.

					ESCOBAR
			But I thought you'd hired a
			private investigator --

					EVELYN
			A private investigator?

					ESCOBAR
				(gesturing vaguely
				 toward the door)
			Mr. Gittes.

					EVELYN
			Well yes --

91	Evelyn looks up to see Gittes standing in the doorway
	only a foot or two from her. She stops cold. They look
	at one another for a long moment.

					EVELYN
				(her eyes on Gittes)
			But I... I... did that because
			I thought it was a nasty rumor I'd
			put an end to...

	She finishes, looks plaintively at Gittes. Escobar is 
	right at her back. Gittes says nothing.

					ESCOBAR
			-- And when did Mr. Gittes inform
			you that these rumors had some
			foundation in fact?

	Evelyn looks at Escobar but do
190
esn't know how to answer him.

					GITTES
				(smoothly)
			-- Just before the story broke in
			the papers, Lou.

92	Escobar nods. They begin to walk slowly, again have to
	move out of the way as some other corpse is being wheeled
	out of one of the Coroner cubicles.

					ESCOBAR
			-- You wouldn't happen to know
			the present whereabouts of the
			young woman.

					GITTES
			-- No.

					ESC
fa0
OBAR
			Or her name?

					GITTES
			-- No.

	They have walked a few steps further down the hall.

					EVELYN
			Will you need me for anything
			else, Lieutenant?

					ESCOBAR
			I don't think so, Mrs. Mulwray.
			Of course you have my deepest
			sympathy -- and -- if we need
			anymore information, we'll be
			in touch.

					GITTES
			I'll walk her to her car, be
			right back.

93	ESCOBAR'S POV

	Evelyn glances at Gittes. They go through a couple of
	outer doors and pass several reporters who have been
	in the outer hall, laughing, kidding, the tag end of
	lines like "only in L.A." and "Southern Cafeteria."

	Gittes hurries her past the reporters who flank them,
	asking questions. Gittes brushes them aside.

94	EVELYN AND GITTES - AT HER CAR

	in a small parking lot.

	Evelyn fumbles in her bag, looking feverishly for some-
	thing in her purse.

					GITTES
			Mrs. Mulwray?... Mrs. Mulwray.

					EVELYN
				(flushed, perspiring)
			... Just a minute...

					GITTES
			(touching her gently)
			-- You left your keys in the ignition.

					EVELYN
			Oh... thank you.

	She glances down, leans against the side of the car.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			Thank you for going along with
			me. I just didn't want to explain
			anything... I'll send you a check.

					GITTES
				(puzzled)
			A check?

	Evelyn gets in her car.

					EVELYN
			To make it official, I hired you.

	She drives off, leaving Gittes gaping.

95	INT. CORONER'S OFFICE HALLWAY

					GITTES
			Don't give me that, Lou. You
			hauled me down here for a statement.

	Escobar shrugs.

					ESCOBAR
			I don't want it anymore.

					GITTES
			No?

					ESCOBAR
			No -- it was an accident.

					GITTES
			You mean that's what you're going
			to call it.

	Escobar looks up.

					ESCOBAR
			That's right.
				(contemptuously)
			Out of respect for his civic 
			position.

	Resume walking.

	Gittes laughs.

					GITTES
			What'd he do, Lou, make a pass
			at your sister?

	Escobar stops.

					ESCOBAR
			No -- he drowned a cousin of mine
			with about five hundred other
			people. But -- they weren't
			very important, Just a bunch of
			dumb Mexicans living by a dam.
			Now beat it, Gittes, you don't
			come out of this smelling like
			a rose, you know.

					GITTES
			Oh yeah? Can you think of
			something to charge me with?

					ESCOBAR
			When I do, you'll hear about it.

	Gittes nods, turns, and walks down the hall.

96	OUTSIDE MORGUE

	Gittes stops by a body on the table, the toe tagged with
	Mulwray's name. MORTY is standing near it in a doorway
	to an adjoining room. A RADIO is on, and with it the
	announcement that they're about to hear another chapter
	in the life of Lorenzo Jones and his devoted wife, Belle.
	Another Coroner's assistant sits at the table, listening
	to the radio and eating a sandwich.

97	Gittes ambles into the room.

					MORTY
				(a cigarette dangling
				 out of his mouth)
			Jake, what're you doin' here?

					GITTES
			Nothin', Morty, it's my lunch
			hour, I thought I'd drop by and
			see who died lately.

	Gittes picks up the sheet and pulls it back. CAMERA
	GETS ITS FIRST GLIMPSE of Mulwray's body -- eyes open,
	the face badly cut and bruised.

					MORTY
			Yeah? Ain't that something?
			Middle of a drought, the water
			commissioner drowns -- only in L.A.

					GITTES
				(looking at. Mulwray)
			-- Yeah -- banged up pretty bad --

					MORTY
			-- That's a long fall.

					GITTES
			-- So how are you, Morty?

	Morty is wheeling in another body with the help of an
	assistant.

					MORTY
			-- Never better. You know me, Jake.

	As he begins to move the body into the refrigerator, he
	breaks into a wrenching spasm of coughing. Gittes spots
	the other body, lowers the. sheet on Mulwray.

					GITTES
				(picking up on cough)
			-- Yeah -- so who you got there?

	Morty pulls back the sheet.

					MORTY
			Leroy Shuhardt, local drunk --
			used to hang around Ferguson's
			Alley --

	Morty brushes some sand from the man's face, laugh
190
s.

					MORTY
				(continuing)
			-- Quite a character. Lately he'd
			been living in one of the downtown
			storm drains -- had a bureau dresser
			down there and everything.

98	Gittes has already lost interest. He starts away.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah.

					MORTY
			Drowned, too.

	This stops Gittes.

					GITTES
			Come again?

					MORTY
			Yeah, got dead drunk, passed out
			in the bottom o
fa0
f the riverbed.

					GITTES
			The L.A. River?

					MORTY
				(a little puzzled)
			Yeah, under Hollenbeck Bridge,
			what's wrong with that?

	Gittes has moved back to the body, looks at it more
	closely.

					GITTES
			It's bone dry, Morty.

					MORTY
			It's not completely dry.

					GITTES
			Yeah, well he ain't gonna drown
			in a damp riverbed either, I don't
			care how soused he was. That's
			like drowning in a teaspoon.

	Morty shrugs.

					MORTY
			We got water out of him, Jake.
			He drowned.

	Gittes walks away mumbling.

					GITTES
			Jesus, this town...

99	EXT. SUNSET BOULEVARD - GITTES - DAY

	He's parked on an overpass -- the sign HOLLENBECK BRIDGE
	on one of its concrete columns. Gittes looks down into
	the riverbed below.

100	FROM THE BRIDGE

	Gittes can see the muddy remains of a collapsed shack,
	its contents strewn down river from the bridge. Below
	him, lying half over the storm drain and one wall that
	was on the bank of the river is a sign that proclaims
	OWN YOUR OWN OFFICE IN THIS BUILDING $5000 to $6000
	which was used as a roof of sorts. Downstream, there's
	the dresser, an oil drum, a Ford seat cushion, an Armour
	lard can, etc. -- the trashy remains of Shuhardt's home.

101	Gittes scrambles down the embankment and as he lands near
	the storm drain one shoe sinks, ankle deep into mud.
	Gittes pulls it out, swearing.

	He begins to walk a little further downstream when he
	hears the vaguely familiar SQUISHY CLOP of something.

	Clearing the bridge. on the opposite side is the little
	Mexican Boy, again on his swayback horse, riding along
	the muddy bank.

	They look at one another a moment.

					GITTES
				(calling out to him)
			You were riding here the other
			day, weren't you...?

	The Boy doesn't answer.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Speak English?... Habla Ingles?

					THE BOY
				(finally)
			Si.

					GITTES
			Didn't you talk to a man here
			-- few days ago... wore glasses
			... he...

	The Boy nods.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			What did you talk about, mind
			my asking?

	The shadows of the two are very long now.

					THE BOY
				(finally)
			The water.

					GITTES
			What about the water?

					THE BOY
			-- when it comes.

					GITTES
			-- When it comes? What'd you
			tell him?

					THE BOY
			Comes in different parts of the
			river -- every night a different
			part.

	Gittes nods. The horse snorts. The Boy rides slowly on.

102	EXT. RIVEBED - DUSK

	Gittes scrambles up the embankment to note the direction
	the storm drain by Hollenbeck Bridge takes. It is headed
	above toward the Hollywood Hills, where the sun is
	setting.

103	EXT. GITTES IN CAR - NIGHTFALL

	winding his way up a section of the Hollywood Hills. He
	picks up on an open flood channel with the spotlight by
	the driver's windwing.

104	GITTES IN CAR- MOVING

	along the flood channel. It is dark now and Gittes follows 
	the channel with the car spotlight. He turns at a fork 
	in the road which allows him to continue following the 
	flood channel.

105	FURTHER UP - MOVING

	The road is narrower. Gittes drives more slowly. Foliage
	is overgrown in the channel so its bottom cannot be
	glimpsed.

106	STILL FURTHER - NIGHT
	The road is dirt. Heavy clusters of oak trees and 
	eucalyptus are everywhere. It is very still. Another 
	turn and a pie-shaped view of a lake of lights in the 
	city below can be GLIMPSED.

107	POV - CHAIN-LINK FENCE

	over the road, bolted. It says OAK PASS RESERVOIR.
	KEEP OUT. NO TRESPASSING.

	The chain-link itself actually extends over the flood
	channel and down into it, making access along the
	channel itself impossible.

108	Gittes backs up, turns off the motor, the car lights, the
	spotlight. A lone light overhead on tension wires is the
	sole illumination. There is only the eerie SOUND of the
	tension WIRES HUMMING.

	Gittes gets out of the car, clubs the fence near the
	Flood channel itself.

109	ON THE OTHER SIDE

	Gittes carefully works his way up through the thick
	F
190
oliage toward a second and large chain-link fence.
	Lights from the reservoir still higher above can be SEEN.

	Suddenly there is a GUNSHOT. Then ANOTHER. Gittes dives
	into the flood control channel, which is at this point
	about four feet deep and six feet wide. There is the
	SOUND of men scurrying through the brush, coming near
	him, then retreating. Gittes loses himself among the
	ivy in the c
fa0
hannel.

	He waits. The men seem to have passed him by. But there
	is another SOUND now -- an echoing growing sound. It 
	puzzles Gittes. He starts to lift his head to catch 
	the direction.

110	GITTES IN FLOOD CONTROL CHANNEL - NIGHT

	Then he's inundated with a rush of water which pours over
	him, knocks off his hat, carries him down the channel,
	banging into its banks, as he desperately tries to grab
	some of the overgrowth to hang on and pull himself out.
	But the force of the stream batters him and carries him
	with it until he's brought rudely to the chain-link 
	fence. It stops him cold. He's nearly strained through 
	it.

	Swearing and choking, he pulls himself out of the rushing
	water by means of the fence itself.

	Drenched, battered, he slowly climbs back over the fence
	and makes his way toward his car.

111	AT GITTES' CAR

	He fishes for his car keys, looks down -- one shoe is
	missing.

					GITTES
				(grumbling)
			Goddam Florsheim shoe, goddammit.

	He starts to get into his car but Mulvihill and a SMALLER
	MAN stop him -- Mulvihill pulling his coat down and 
	pinning his arms -- holding him tightly. The smaller man
	thrusts a switchblade knife about an inch and a half up
	Gittes' left nostril.

					SMALLER MAN
				(shaking with emotion)
			Hold it there, kitty cat.

112	CLOSE - GITTES

	frozen, the knife in his nostril, the street lamp over-
	head gleaming on the silvery blade.

					THE SMALLER MAN
			You are a very nosey fellow, kitty
			cat... you know what happens to
			nosey fellows?

	The Smaller Man actually seems to be trembling with rage
	when he says this. Gittes doesn't move.

					SMALLER MAN
				(continuing)
			Wanna guess? No? Okay.
			lose their noses.

	With a quick flick the Smaller Man pulls back on the
	blade, laying Gittes' left nostril open about an inch
	further. Gittes screams. Blood gushes down onto his shirt
	and coat.

	Gittes bends over, instinctively trying to keep the blood
	from getting on his clothes. Mulvihill and the Smaller
	Man stare at him.

					THE SMALLER MAN
				(continuing)
			Next time you lose the whole thing,
			kitty cat. I'll cut it off and
			feed it to my goldfish, understand?

					MULVIHILL
			Tell him you understand, Gittes.

113	EXT. OAK PASS RESERVOIR - NIGHT

	Gittes is now groveling on his hands and knees.

					GITTES
				(mumbling)
			I understand...

	Gittes on the ground can see only his tormentor's two-
	tone brown and white wing-tipped shoes -- lightly
	freckled with his blood.

114	THE SHOE

	comes up and lightly shoves Gittes into the ground.
	the SOUND of FOOTSTEPS RETREATING, Gittes gasping.

115	INT. GITTES' OFFICE - GITTES

	sits behind his desk, BACK TO CAMERA, not moving. Duffy
	sits staring at nothing, Walsh moves uneasily around the
	room.

	The PHONE is RINGING. Sophie BUZZES.

					GITTES
				(pressing down
				 intercom)
			Yeah, Sophie.

					SOPHIE'S VOICE
			A Miss Sessions calling.

					GITTES
			Who?

					SOPHIE'S VOICE
			Ida Sessions.

					GITTES
			Don't know her -- take a number.

116	NEW ANGLE - REVEALING

	a bandage spread-eagled across Gittes' nose.

					WALSH
			So some contractor wants to
			build a dam and he makes a
			few payoffs. So what?

	Gittes turns slowly to Walsh. He lightly taps his nose.

					WALSH
			(	continuing)
			Think you can nail Mulvihill?
			They'll claim you were trespassing.

					GITTES
			I don't want Mulvihill. I. want the
			big boys that are making the payoffs.

					DUFFY
			Then what'll you do?

					GITTES
			Sue the shit out of 'em.

					WALSH 
			Yeah?

					GITTES
			Yeah -- what's wrong with you
			guys? Think ahead. We find 'em,
			sue 'em -- we'll make a killing.
				(a dazzling smile)
			We'll have dinner at Chasen's
			twice a week, we'll be pissing
			on ice the rest of our lives.

					WALSH
			Sue people like that they're
			liable to be having dinner with
			the Judge who's trying the suit.

	Gittes looks irritated. The PHONE RINGS again.

					SOPHIE'S VOICE
			Miss Ida
190
 Sessions again. She says
			you know her.

					GITTES
			Okay.

	Gittes picks up the phone. He winks to his boys.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Hello, Miss Sessions. I don't
			believe we've had the pleasure.

					IDA'S VOICE
			-- Oh yes we have... are you
			alone, Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
				(clowning a little
				 for the boys)
			Isn't everybody? What can I do
			for you, Miss Sessions
fa0
?

	Walsh promptly starts to tell Duffy the Admiral Byrd
	story.

					IDA'S VOICE
			Well, I'm a working girl, Mr.
			Gittes -- I didn't come in to see
			you on my own.

					GITTES
			-- When did you come in?

					IDA'S VOICE
			-- I was the one who pretended to
			be Mrs. Mulwray, remember?

ll8	Walsh has finished off the punch line and both men are
	laughing raucously. Gittes drops the mail he's been
	loafing through and puts his hand over the receiver.

					GITTES 		
				(to Duffy and Walsh)
			Shut the fuck up!
				(then back to Ida)
			... Yes I remember -- nothing,
			Miss Sessions, just going over
			a detail or two with my associates
			... you were saying?

					IDA'S VOICE
			Well I never expected anything
			to happen like what happened to
			Mr. Mulwray, the point is if it
			ever comes out I want somebody
			to know I didn't know what would
			happen.

					GITTES
			-- I understand... if you could
			tell me who employed you, Miss
			Sessions -- that could help us
			both --

					IDA'S VOICE
			Oh no --

					GITTES
			... Why don't you give me your
			address and we can talk this over?

					IDA'S VOICE
			No, Mr. Gittes -- just look in
			the obituary column of today's
			Times...

					GITTES
			The obituary column?

					IDA'S VOICE
			You'll find one of those people --

					GITTES
			'Those people?' Miss Sessions --

	She hangs up. Gittes looks to his two men.

119	OMITTED

120	INT. BROWN DERBY - CLOSE ON NEWSPAPER

	Gittes is seated, flips through the paper until he finds
	the OBITUARY COLUMN -- scans it, looks up -- abruptly
	tears the column from the paper and puts it in his
	pocket.

	When he closes the paper we can SEE headlines in the
	left hand column: WATER BOND ISSUE PASSES COUNCIL.
	Ten million dollar referendum to go before the public.

	Evelyn Mulwray is standing at the table as he does so.
	He rises, allows her to sit.

121	CLOSE ON EVELYN

	Gittes watches her as she removes her gloves slowly...
	She's wearing dove gray gabardine -- subdued, tailored.

					GITTES
			Thanks for coming... drink?

	The waiter's appeared. Evelyn is looking at Gittes' nose.

					EVELYN
			Tom Collins -- with lime, not
			lemon, please.

	Evelyn looks down and smoothes her gloves. When she
	looks back up she stares expectantly at Gittes.

	Gittes pulls out a torn envelope. The initials ECM can
	be SEEN in a delicate scroll on the comer of it.

					GITTES
			I got your check in the mall.

					EVELYN
			Yes. As I said, I was very
			grateful.

	Gittes' fingers the envelope. He coughs.

					GITTES
			Mrs. Mulwray, I'm afraid that's
			not good enough.

			EVELYN
				(a little embarrassed)
			Well, how much would you like?

121 	CLOSE ON EVELYN

					GITTES
			Stop it. The money's fine. It's
			generous but you've shortchanged
			me on the story.

					EVELYN
				(coolly)
			I have?

					GITTES
			I think so. Something besides
			your husband's death was bothering
			you. You were upset but not that
			upset.

					EVELYN
			Mr. Gittes...
				(icily)
			Don't tell me how I feel.

	The drinks come. The waiter sets them down.

					GITTES
			Sorry. Look, you sue me, your
			husband dies, you drop the
			lawsuit like a hot potato, and
			all of it quicker than wind from
			a duck's ass -- excuse me. Then
			you ask me to lie to the police.

					EVELYN
			It wasn't much of a lie.

					GITTES
			-- If your husband was killed it
			was.
				(meaning check)
			-- This can look like you paid
			me off to withhold evidence.

					EVELYN
			But he wasn't killed.

	Gittes smiles.

					GITTES
			I think you're hiding something,
			Mrs. Mulwray.

122	Evelyn remains unperturbed.

					EVELYN
			-- Well, I suppose I am...
			actually I knew about the affair.

					GITTES
			How did you find out?

					EVELYN
			My husband.

					GITTES
			He told you?

	Evelyn nods.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			-- And you weren't the slightest
			bit upset about it?

					EVELYN
			-- I was grateful.

	Evelyn for the first time appea
190
rs a little embarrassed.

					GITTES
			You'll have to explain that,
			Mrs. Mulwray.

					EVELYN
			-- Why?

					GITTES
				(a flash of
				 annoyance)
			Look, I do matrimonial work, It's
			my metiay. When a wife tells me
			she's happy her husband is cheating
			on her it runs contrary to my
			experience.

	Gittes looks significantly to Evelyn.

					EVELYN
			Unless what?

					GITTES
			
fa0
	(looking directly
				 at her)
			She's cheating on him.

122	Evelyn doesn't reply.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			-- Were you?

123	Evelyn is clearly angry but she is controlling it.

					EVELYN
			I don't like the word 'cheat.'

					GITTES
			Did you have affairs?

					EVELYN
				(flashing)
			Mr. Gittes --

					GITTES
			Did he know?

					EVELYN
				(almost an outburst)
			Well I wouldn't run home and tell
			him whenever I went to bed with
			someone, if that's what you mean.

	This subdues Gittes a little. Evelyn is still a little
	heated.

					EVELYN
				(continuing; more
				 calmly)
			-- Is there anything else you
			want to know?

					GITTES
			Where you were when your husband
			died.

					EVELYN
			I can't tell you.

					GITTES
			You mean you don't know where
			you were?

					EVELYN
			I mean I can't tell you.

					GITTES
			-- You were seeing someone, too.

124	Evelyn looks squarely at him. She doesn't deny it.

					GITTES
			-- For very long?

					EVELYN
			I don't see anyone for very long,
			Mr. Gittes. It's difficult for
			me. Now I think you know all
			you need to about me. I didn't
			want publicity. I didn't want
			to go into any of this, then or
			now. Is this all?

	Gittes nods.

					GITTES
			Oh, by the way. What's the 'C'
			stand for?

	He's been fingering the envelope. .

					EVELYN
				(she stammers
				 slightly)
			K... Cross.

					GITTES
			That your maiden name?

					EVELYN
			Yes... why?

					GITTES
			No reason.

	Evelyn turns into Gittes.

					EVELYN
			You must've had a reason to ask
			me that.

					GITTES
				(shrugs)
			No. I'm just a snoop.

					EVELYN
			You seem to have had a reason
			for every other question.

					GITTES
			No, not for that one.

					EVELYN
			I don't believe you.

	Gittes suddenly turns sharply in to Evelyn.

					GITTES
				(moving in)
			Do me a favor. Sit still and
			act like I'm charming.

	Evelyn involuntarily draws back.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			There's somebody here. Say
			something. Anything. Something
			like we're being intimate.

125	Evelyn reluctantly allows Gittes to move closer and
	dangle his hand in front of their faces. She stares
	at him.

					EVELYN
				(meaning his nose)
			How did it happen?

					GITTES
				(quietly)
			Been meaning to talk to you
			about that.

					EVELYN
				(quietly)
			Maybe putting your nose in other
			people's business?

					GITTES
				(quietly)
			More like other people putting
			their business in my nose.

	Evelyn actually smiles a little.

					WOMAN'S VOICE
			You son of a bitch.

	Gittes looks up and flashes his smile.

					GITTES
			Mrs. Match. How're you?

	Mrs. MATCH is swaying over the table, a plump woman with
	a glass of whiskey in one hand, a large purse in the
	other, and a menacing look in her eye.

					MRS. MATCH
			Don't give me that, you son of
			a bitch.

					GITTES
			Okay.

	Gittes turns back to Evelyn.

					EVELYN
				(softly)
			Another satisfied client?

					GITTES
			Another satisfied client's wife.

					MRS. MATCH
			Look at me, you son of a bitch.
			You... you bastard. Are you
			happy, are you happy now?

	She tries to take a swipe at Gittes with her purse.
	Gittes covers himself. Waiters rush over.

					MRS. MATCH
			-- You smug son of a bitch. My
			husband's so upset he sweats all
			night! How do you think that makes
			me feel?

					GITTES
			Sweaty?

	Mrs. Match swings at Gittes again and again. She catches
	him on the nose. It hurts. He covers it -- then swings
	his leg out from under the table and deftly kicks her
	in the shin.

	Mrs. Match drops her purse and spills her drink. She
	grabs her shin, hopping around a little. The waiters
	who had tried to restrain her now try to keep her from
	falling over.

					GITTES
			Let's get out of here before she
			picks up her purse.

	They rise and move toward the door.

					EVELYN
				(quietly)
			Tough guy, huh?

	Gittes looks, sees she's kidding, and nods.

127	OUTSIDE IN THE PARKING L
190
OT - DUSK

	Gittes' car has been .brought by the parking attendant.
	The attendant opens the passenger side for Evelyn.

					EVELYN
			Oh, no. I've got my own car.
			The cream-colored Packard.

					GITTES
				(to attendant who
				 dutifully starts
				 for her car)
			Wait a minute, sonny.
				(to Evelyn)
			I think you better come with me.

					EVELYN
			What for? There's nothing more
			to 
fa0
say.
				(to attendant)
			Get my car, please.

	The attendant starts after it again. Gittes leans on
	the open door of his car and in to Evelyn. He talks
	quietly but spits it out.

					GITTES
			Okay, go home. But in case
			you're interested your husband
			was murdered. Somebody's dumping
			tons of water out of the city
			reservoirs when we're supposedly
			in the middle of a drought, he
			found out, and he was killed.
			There's a waterlogged drunk in
			the morgue -- involuntary manslaughter
			if anybody wants to take the trouble
			which they don't. it looks like half
			the city is trying to cover it all
			up, which is fine with me. But,
			Mrs. Mulwray --
				(now inches from her)
			-- I goddam near lost my nose!
			And I like it. I like breathing
			through it. And I still think
			you're hiding something.

	Evelyn steadies herself on the open car door. She stares
	at Gittes for a long moment. Then he gently tugs the
	car door closed.

					EVELYN
			Mr. Gittes --

	He drives off into the Wilshire traffic, leaving Evelyn
	looking after him.

128	INT.. DWP - MULWRAY'S OFFICE DOOR

	with its lettering:

				HOLLIS I. MULWRAY
				 CHIEF ENGINEER

	Gittes goes through the door to the Secretary. She looks
	up. She recognizes Gittes again and is not happy to see
	him.

					GITTES
			J.J. Gittes to see Mr. Yelburton.

	The Secretary immediately gets up and goes into the inner
	office.

	Gittes turns and strolls around the office a moment --
	he sees a photographic display of THE HISTORY OF THE DWP
	- THE EARLY YEARS, along the wall. He stops as he spots
	a photo of the man with the cane Gittes had seen photos
	of earlier -- He is standing high in the mountains, near
	a pass. The caption reads JULIAN CROSS - 1905. Cross
	is strikingly handsome.

	Gittes immediately pulls out the envelope containing
	Evelyn's check. He looks at the corner of it, his
	thumb pressing down under the middle initial C, then
	he looks back to the photos --

	The Secretary returns.

					SECRETARY
			Mr. Yelburton will be busy for
			some time.

					GITTES
			Well I'm on my lunch hour. I'll 
			wait.

					SECRETARY
			He's liable to be tied up
			indefinitely.

					GITTES
			I take a long lunch. All day
			sometimes.

	Gittes pulls out a cigarette case, offers the Secretary
	one. She refuses, He lights up and begins to hum 'The
	Way You Look Tonight,' strolling along the wall looking
	at more photographs.

129	INT. MULWRAY'S OFFICES

	Here he spots several photos of a much younger Mulwray,
	along with Julian Cross. One of the captions: HOLLIS
	MULWRAY AND JULIAN CROSS AS THE AQUEDUCT CLEARS THE
	SANTA SUSANNAH PASS - 1912. Gittes, still humming,
	turns to the Secretary.

					GITTES
			Julian Cross worked for the water
			department?

					SECRETARY
				(looking up)
			Yes. No.

					GITTES
				(humming, then)
			He did or he didn't?

					SECRETARY
			He owned it.

	Gittes is genuinely surprised. at this.

					GITTES
			He owned the water department?

					SECRETARY
			Yes.

					GITTES
			He owned the entire water supply
			for the city?

					SECRETARY
			Yes.

					GITTES
				(really surprised)
			How did they get it away from him?

					SECRETARY
				(a sigh, then)
			Mr. Mulwray felt the public should
			own the display -- the water. If
			you'll just read the display --

					GITTES
				(glances back, hums,
				 then)
			Mulwray? I thought you said
			Cross owned the department.

					SECRETARY
			-- Along with Mr. Mulwray.

					GITTES
			They were partners.

					SECRETARY
				(testily)
			Yes. Yes, they were partners.

	She gets up, annoyed, and goes into Yelburton's inner
	office.

	Gittes goes back to the photographs. He hears a 
	SCRATCHING SOUND, apparently coming from just outside the
	outer door.

	He moves quickly to it, hesitates -- swiftly opens the
	door. workmen are behind it, scraping away Mulwray's
	name on the outer door -- looking up at Gittes in some
	surprise.

	The Secretary returns, sees the workman on the fl
190
oor.

					SECRETARY
				(to Gittes)
			Mr. Yelburton will see you now.

	Gittes nods graciously, heads on into Yelburton's office.

130	INT. DWP - YELBURTON & GITTES

	There is a subtle but perceptible difference in 
	Yelburton's attitude. He's now head of the department.

					YELBURTON
			Mr. Gittes, sorry to keep you
			waiting -- these staff meetings,
			they just go on and on --

					GITTES
fa0

			Yeah -- must be especially tough
			to take over under these
			circumstances.

					YELBURTON
			Oh yes. Hollis was the best
			department head the city's ever
			had. My goodness, what happened
			to your nose?

					GITTES
				(smiles)
			I cut myself shaving.

					YELBURTON
			You ought to be more careful.
			That must really smart.

					GITTES
			Only when I breathe.

					YELBURTON
				(laughing)
			Only when you breathe... don't tell
			me you're still working for
			Mrs. Mulwray?

					GITTES
			I never was.

					YELBURTON
			(stops smiling)
			I don't understand.

					GITTES
			Neither do I, actually. But you
			hired me -- or you hired that chippie
			to hire me.

					YELBURTON
			Mr. Gittes, you're not making a
			bit of sense.

					GITTES
			Well, look at it this way, Mr.
			Yelburton. Mulwray didn't want
			to build a dam -- and he had a
			reputation that was hard to get
			around, so. you decided to ruin it.
			Then he found out that you were
			dumping water every night -- then
			he -- was drowned.

					YELBURTON
			Mr. Gittes! That's an outrageous
			accusation. I don't know what
			you're talking about.

					GITTES
			Well, Whitey Mehrholtz over at
			the Times will. Dumping thousands
			of gallons of water down the toilet
			in the middle of a drought -- that's
			news.

131	Gittes heads toward the door.

					YELBURTON
			Wait -- please sit down, Mr. Gittes.
			We're... well, we're not anxious
			for this to get around, but we have
			been diverting a little water
			to irrigate avocado and walnut
			groves in the northwest
			valley. As you know, the farmers
			there have no legal right to our
			water, and since the drought we've
			had to cut them off -- the city
			comes first, naturally. But,
			well, we've been trying to help
			some of them out, keep them from
			going under. Naturally when you
			divert water -- you get a little
			runoff.

					GITTES
			Yeah, a little runoff. Where are
			those orchards?

					YELBURTON
			I said, the northwest valley.

					GITTES
			That's like saying they're in
			Arizona.

					YELBURTON
			Mr. Gittes, my field men are out
			and I can't give you an exact
			location...

	Gittes nods.

					GITTES
			You're a married man, am I right?

					YELBURTON
			Yes... 

					GITTES
			Hard working, have a wife and kids...

					YELBURTON
			Yes...

					GITTES
			I don't want to nail you -- I
			Just want to know who put you up
			to it. I'll give you a few days
			to think it over --
				(hands him a card)
			-- call me. I can help. Who knows?
			Maybe we can lay the whole thing off
			on a few big shots -- and you can
			stay head of the department for
			the next twenty years.

	Gittes smiles -- leaves an unsmiling Yelburton.

132	INT. GITTES OFFICE

	Gittes enters, drops his hat on Sophie's desk. Sophie
	tries to tell him something but Gittes goes on into his
	office.

133	EVELYN MULWRAY

	is sitting, smoking. She looks up when he enters.

					EVELYN
			What's your usual salary?

	Gittes moves to his desk, barely breaking stride at the
	sight of her.

					GITTES
			Thirty-five bucks daily for me,
			twenty for each of my operators --
			plus expenses, plus my fee if I
			show results.

	He's sitting now. Evelyn is very pale now, obviously
	very shaken.

					EVELYN
			Whoever's behind my husband's
			death, why have they gone to all
			this trouble?

					GITTES
			-- Money. How they plan to make
			it by emptying the reservoirs --
			that I don't know.

					EVELYN
			I'll pay your salary plus five
			thousand dollars if you find out
			what happened to Hollis and who
			is involved.

	Gittes buzzes Sophie.

					GITTES
			Sophie, draw up one of our
			standard forms for Mrs. Mulwray.
				(he leans back; to
				 Evelyn)
			Tell me, did you get married
			before or after Mulwray and your
			father sold the water department?

	Evelyn nearly jumps at the question.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Your father is Julian Cross, isn't
			he?

					EVELYN
	
190
		Yes, of course -- it was quite a
			while after. I was just out of
			grade school when they did that.

					GITTES
			-- so you married your father's
			business partner?

	Evelyn nods. She lights another cigarette.

					GITTES
 				(continuing; staring
				 at her, points to
				 the ashtray)
			You've got one going, Mrs. Mulwray.

					EVELYN
			-- Oh. 

134	She quickly stubs one out.

					
fa0
GITTES
			Is there something upsetting about
			my asking about your father?

					EVELYN
			No!... yes, a little. You see
			Hollis and my fa -- my father had
			a falling out...

					GITTES
			Over the water department -- or
			over you?

					EVELYN
				(quickly)
			Not over me. Why would they have
			a falling out over me?

					GITTES
				(noting her
				 nervousness)
			-- Then it was over the water
			department.

					EVELYN
			Not exactly. Well, I mean, yes.
			Yes and no. Hollis felt the public
			should own the water but I don't
			think -- my father felt that way.
			Actually, it was over the Van der
			Lip. The dam that broke.

					GITTES
			-- Oh, yeah?

					EVELYN
			Yes. He never forgave him for it.

					GITTES
			Never forgave him for what?

					EVELYN
			For talking him into building it,
			he never forgave my father... They
			haven't spoken to this day.

					GITTES
				(starts a little)
			You sure shout that?

					EVELYN
			Of course I'm sure.

					GITTES
			What about you -- do you and your
			father get along?

135	Sophie comes in with the form, cutting off Evelyn's
	reply. Gittes places two copies on a coffee table in
	front of Evelyn.

					GITTES
			Sign here... The other copy's for
			you.

	She signs it. When she looks back up, Gittes is staring
	intently at her.

					EVELYN
			What are you thinking?

					GITTES
				(picking up one of
				 copies, folding it,
				 putting it in his
				 pocket)
			Before this -- I turned on the
			faucet, it came out hot and cold,
			I didn't think there was a thing
			to it.

136	INT. SEAPLANE

	The engines make the small cabin vibrate. Gittes threads
	his way down the tiny aisle of the eight passenger cabin,
	which is full of middle-aged men in old clothes and
	their fishing gear. Gittes is poked by a pole -- has to
	move along.

	One of the old men says something to him.

					GITTES
				(above the engines)
			What?

					OLD MAN
			You'll have to sit with the pilot.

	Gittes moves forward into the cockpit, the PILOT looks
	up -- nods for Gittes to sit down, first moving a half-
	eaten cheese sandwich out of Gittes' seat.

137	EXT. HARBOR- SEAPLANE

	taxiing down the ramp into the sea. In a moment, it
	kicks up a spray of foam and takes off.

138	INT. COCKPIT

	The island gradually looming larger before the Pilot and
	Gittes.

	The Pilot glances over at Gittes -- who, as usual, is
	impeccably dressed -- a contrast to the others on the
	plane.

					PILOT
				(above the engines)
			Well, you're not going fishing.

	Gittes shakes his head.

					GITTES
			Not exactly.

					PILOT
				(winks)
			But that's what you told your
			wife ---

	The Pilot laughs raucously. Gittes laughs politely.

					PILOT
			-- lots of fellas do. Tell the
			little woman they're going on a
			fishing trip, then shack up with
			some little twist on the island
			... she pretty?

					GITTES
				(abruptly)
			I'm going to see a man called
			Julian Cross -- ever heard of him?

					PILOT
			Is the Pope Catholic? Who are
			you, mister?... I ask because he
			doesn't see a whole lot of people.

					GITTES
			I'm working for his daughter.

					PILOT
				(surprised)
			That right?... She used to be
			some looker.

					GITTES
			She ain't exactly long in the
			tooth now.

					PILOT
			She must be about thirty-three,
			thirty-four.

					GITTES
			You must be thinking of a different
			daughter --

					PILOT
			No, he's only got one, I remember
			her age, I read it in the newspapers
			when she ran away.

					GITTES
			She ran away?

					PILOT
			Oh yeah, it was a big thing at
			the time -- Julian Cross' daughter.
			God almighty. She was a wild
			little thing.

139	He gives a sidelong glance to Gittes, a little concerned
	he's said too much.

					PILOT
				(continuing)
			Course, she settled down nicely.

					GITTES
				(smiling a little)
			Well, you never know, do you?

					PILOT
				(loosening up)
			That's for sure.

					GITTES
			Why'd she run away?

					PILO
190
T
			Oh, you know -- she was sixteen
			or seventeen.

					GITTES
				(nudging him)
			We missed the best of it, didn't
			we, pal?

	Both men laugh a little lewdly.

					PILOT
			She ran off to Mexico -- rumor was
			she was knocked up and didn't even
			know who the father was -- went
			there to get rid of it.

					GITTES
			You don't say?

					PILOT
			Cross was looking for her all
			over
fa0
 the country -- offered rewards,
			everything. Felt real sorry for
			him, with all his money.

140	ALBACORE CLUB - DAY

	A pleasant but unobtrusive clapboard blue and white
	building on the bay overlooking the harbor. The sea-
	plane lands. A motor launch with a burgee of a fish
	flying from it turns and heads in the direction of the
	plane.

141	EXT. WINDING ROAD - RANCHO DEL CRUCE

	Gittes, driven in a station wagon, passes under the sign
	with a cross painted below the name.

	The ranch itself is only partially in a valley on the
	island -- as the wagon continues one can SEE that it is
	actually a miniature California, encompassing desert,
	mountains and canyon that tumble down palisades to the
	windward side of the sea.

	The wagon comes to a halt where a group of hands are
	clustered around a corral. The circle of men drift
	apart, leaving JULIAN CROSS standing, using a cane for
	support, reedy but handsome in a rough linen shirt and
	jeans. When he talks his strong face is lively, in repose
	it looks ravaged.

142	EXT. BRIDLE PATH - GITTES & CROSS

	walking toward the main house -- a classic Monterey. A
	horse led on a halter by another ranch hand slows down
	and defecates in the center of the path they are taking.
	Gittes doesn't notice.

					CROSS
			Horseshit.

	Gittes pauses, not certain he has heard correctly.

					GITTES
			Sir?

					CROSS
			I said horseshit.
			(pointing)
			Horseshit.

					GITTES
			Yes, sir, that's what it looks
			like -- I'll give you that.

	Cross pauses when they reach the dung pile. He removes
	his hat and waves it, inhales deeply.

					CROSS
			Love the smell of it. A lot of
			people do but of course they
			won't admit it. Look at the
			shape.

	Gittes glances down out of politeness.

					CROSS
				(continuing; smiling,
				 almost enthusiastic)
			Always the same.

	Cross walks on. Gittes follows.

					GITTES
			(not one to let it
			 go)
			Always?

					CROSS
			What? Oh, damn near -- yes.
			Unless the animal's sick or
			something.
				(stops and glances.
				 back)
			-- And the steam rising off it
			like that in the morning -- that's
			life, Mr. Gittes. Life.

	They move on.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			Perhaps this preoccupation with
			horseshit may seem a little
			perverse, but I ask you to
			remember this -- one way or
			another, it's what I've dealt
			in all my life. Let's have
			breakfast.

144	EXT. COURTYARD VERANDA - GITTES & CROSS AT BREAKFAST

	Below them is a corral where hands take Arabians, one by
	one, and work them out, letting them run and literally
	kick up their heels. Cross' attention is diverted by
	the animals from time to time. An impeccable Mexican
	butler serves them their main course, broiled fish.

					CROSS
			You know, you've got a nasty
			reputation, Mr. Gittes. I like
			that.

					GITTES
				(dubious)
			Thanks.

					CROSS
			-- If you were a bank president
			that would be one thing -- but
			in your business it's admirable.
			And it's good advertising.

					GITTES
			It doesn't hurt.

					CROSS
			It's why you attract a client
			like my daughter.

					GITTES
			Probably.

					CROSS
			But I'm surprised you're still
			working for her -- unless she's
			suddenly come up with another
			husband.

					GITTES
			No -- she happens to think the
			last one was murdered.

	Cross is visibly surprised.

					CROSS
			How did she get that idea?

					GITTES
			I think I gave it to her.

	Cross nods.

					CROSS
			Uh-huh -- oh I hope you don't
			mind. I believe they should be
			served with the head.

	Gittes glances down at the fish whose isinglass eye
	is glazed over with the heat of cooking.

					GITTES
			-- Fine, as long as you don't
			serve chicken that way.

					CROSS
				(laughs)
			Tell me -- what do the police
			say?

					GITTES
			They're calling it an accident.

					CROSS
			Who's the investigating officer?

					GITTES
			Lou Escobar -- he's a Lieutenant.

					CROSS
			Do you know him?

					GITTES 
			Oh 
190
yes.

					CROSS
			Where from?

					GITTES
			-- We worked Chinatown together,

					CROSS
			Would you call him a capable man?

					GITTES
			Very.

					CROSS
			Honest?

					GITTES
			-- Far as it goes -- of course
			he has to swim in the same water
			we all do.

					CROSS
			Of course -- but you've got no
			reason to think he's bungled
			the case?

					GITTES
			None.

					CROSS
			
fa0
That's too bad.

					GITTES
			Too bad?

					CROSS
			It disturbs me, Mr. Gittes. It
			makes me think you're taking my
			daughter for a ride -- financially
			speaking, of course. How much are
			you charging her?

					GITTES
				(carefully)
			My usual fee -- plus a bonus
			if I come up with any results.

					CROSS
			Are you sleeping with her? Come,
			come, Mr. Gittes -- you don't have
			to think about that to remember,
			do you?

	Gittes laughs.

					GITTES
			If you want an answer to that
			question I can always put one
			of my men on the job. Good
			afternoon, Mr. Cross.

					CROSS
			Mr. Gittes! You're dealing with
			a disturbed woman who's lost her
			husband. I don't want her taken
			advantage of. Sit down.

					GITTES
			What for?

					CROSS
			-- You may think you know what
			you're dealing with -- but
			believe me, you don't.

146	This stops Gittes. He seems faintly mused by it.

					CROSS
			Why is that funny?

					GITTES
			It's what the D.A. used to tell
			me about Chinatown.

					CROSS
			Was he right?

	Gittes shrugs.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			... Exactly what do you know
			about me, Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
			Mainly that you're rich and too
			respectable to want your name in
			the papers.

					CROSS
				(grunts, then)
			'Course I'm respectable. I'm
			old. Politicians, ugly buildings
			and whores all get respectable if
			they last long enough. I'll double
			whatever your fees are -- and I'll
			pay you ten thousand dollars if
			you can find Hollis' girlfriend.

					GITTES
			His girlfriend?

					CROSS
			Yes, his girlfriend.

					GITTES
			You mean the little chippie he
			was with at the El Macando?

					CROSS
			Yes. She's disappeared, hasn't
			she?

					GITTES
			-- Yeah.

					CROSS
			Doesn't that strike you as odd?

					GITTES
			No. She's probably. scared to
			death.

					CROSS
			Wouldn't it be useful to talk to 
			her?

					GITTES
			Maybe.

					CROSS
			If Mulwray was murdered, she was
			probably one of the last people
			to see him.

					GITTES
			You didn't see Mulwray much, did
			you?

					CROSS
			-- No --

					GITTES
			-- When was the last time?

147	Cross starts to reply, then there's the SOUND of a
	MARIACHI BAND and some men in formation clear a bluff
	about a hundred yards off. They are dressed like
	Spanish dons on horseback. For the most part they are
	fat in the saddle and pass along in disordered review
	to the music..

					CROSS
			Sheriff's gold posse... bunch of
			damn fools who pay $5,000 apiece
			to the sheriff's re-election. I
			let 'em practice up out here.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah. Do you remember the
			last time you talked to Mulwray?

	Cross shakes his head.

					CROSS
			-- At my age, you tend to lose
			track...

					GITTES
			Well, It was about five days ago.
			You were outside the Pig 'n Whistle
			-- and you had one hell of an
			argument.

	Cross looks to Gittes in some real surprise.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			I've got the photographs in my
			office -- if they'll help you
			remember. What was the argument
			about?

					CROSS
				(a long pause, then:)
			My daughter.

					GITTES
			What about her?

					CROSS
			-- Just find the girl, Mr. Gittes
			I think she is frightened and I
			happen to know Hollis was fond of
			her. I'd like to help her if I
			can.

					GITTES
			I didn't realize you and Hollis
			were so fond of each other.

148	Cross looks hatefully at Gittes.

					CROSS
			Hollis Mulwray made this city --
			and he made me a fortune... We
			were a lot closer than Evelyn
			realized.

					GITTES
			-- If you want to hire me, I
			still have to know what you and
			Mulwray were arguing about.

					CROSS
				(painfully)
			Well... she's an extremely jealous
			person. I didn't want her to find
			out about the girl.

					GITTES
			How did you find out?

					CROSS
			I've still got a few teeth in my
			head, Mr. Gittes -- and a few
			friends in town.

					GITTES
			Okay -- my sec
190
retary'll send you
			a letter of agreement. Tell me
			-- are you worried about that girl,
			or what Evelyn might do to her?

					CROSS
			Just find the girl.

					GITTES
			-- I'll look into it -- as soon
			as I check out some avocado groves.

					CROSS
			Avocado groves?

					GITTES
			We'll be in touch, Mr. Cross.

149	INT. HALL OF RECORDS - DAY

	Dark and quiet except for the whirring o
fa0
f fans. Gittes
	approaches one of the CLERKS at a desk.

					GITTES
			I'm a little lost -- where can I
			find the plat books for the
			northwest valley?

	The Clerk's droopy eyes widen a little.

					CLERK
			Part of it's in Ventura County.
			We don't have Ventura County in
			our Hall of Records.

	Which is a snotty remark. Gittes smiles.

					GITTES
			I'll settle for L.A. County.

					CLERK
				(regards him, then)
			Row twenty-three, section C.

	The Clerk turns away abruptly. Gittes regards his back
	a moment, then goes to the stacks.

150	THROUGH THE STACKS

	Gittes sees the Clerk turn to another, say something.
	The second clerk gets on the phone. Gittes watches a
	moment, then swiftly turns his attention to the stacks.

	He hauls down the northwest valley volume, opens it.
	It's huge and there's a lot to go through.

	The print itself makes him squint.

	INSERT PAGE

	showing TRACT, LOT, PARCEL, even a METES AND BOUNDS 
	designation where the description of the land parcel is 
	long and hopelessly involved -- e.g. '6000 paces to Rio 
	Seco, thence 7000 paces to Loma Linda, etc.' These 
	Descriptions are old and faded -- in the owners' column, 
	however -- there are numerous freshly-typed names - 
	pasted over the prior owners.

151	GITTES

	Hauls the huge volume back to the Clerk's desk.

					GITTES
				(to Clerk)
			Say... uh... sonny.

152	The Clerk turns sharply around.

					GITTES
			How come all these new names are
			pasted into the plat book?

					CLERK
			Land sales out of escrow are
			always recorded within the week.

	Gittes looks a little surprised.

					GITTES
			Then these are all new owners?

					CLERK
			-- That's right.

					GITTES
				(astonished)
			-- But that means that most of
			the valley's been sold in the
			last few months.

					CLERK
			If that's what it says.

					GITTES
			Can I check one of these volumes
			out?

					CLERK
				(quietly snotty)
			Sir, this is not a lending library,
			it's the Hall of Records.

					GITTES
			Well, then -- how about a ruler?

					CLERK 
			A ruler?

					GITTES
			The print's pretty fine. I forgot
			my glasses. I'd like to be able
			to read across.

	The exasperated Clerk reaches around -- rummages -- slaps
	a ruler on the desk.

	Gittes goes back to the stacks with the ruler. He opens
	the book, places the ruler not horizontally but
	vertically.

153	OMITTED

154	INSERT PLAT BOOK NORTHWEST VALLEY

	Beside the OWNER column he places the ruler, looks toward
	the clerks -- then swiftly rips down the page, tearing
	out a strip about two inches wide -- containing the
	owner's name and property description.
	As he tears, he either sniffles or coughs -- to cover
	the SOUND of the PAPER being ripped.

155	EXT. ROAD - GITTES DRIVING - DAY

	amidst a hall of shimmering dust and heat, parched and
	drying groves, narrower roads.

	He passes a ramshackle home, next to a rotting orchard.
	There is a "SOLD" sign on the collapsing barn. Gittes
	stops -- checks it against the names he had taken from
	the Hall of Records.

156	OLD STUCCO BUILDINGS FURTHER ON.

	and a few withered pepper trees. Gittes has paused at
	this dried-up intersection. There is a "SOLD" sign on a
	drug store. Gittes looks O.S.

	Coming INTO VIEW above the arid fields is a spiraling
	cloud of purple smoke. Gittes heads in that direction.

157	OMITTED

158	Gittes parks at the edge of the field. About twenty
	yards away is a man mounted on a strange machine, holding 
	a lid off it -- billowing lavender clouds are belching
	forth.

	Several CHILDREN are watching the man at work.

					GITTES
				(to one of the Children)
			Say, pal, what's he doing?

					CHILD
			Making some rain.

	Gittes nods, walks over to the man who is elaborately
	busying himself with the intricacies of his machine.
	He's aware of Gittes watching him.

					GITTES
			Well, you're just the man I'm
			looking for.

	The Rainmaker now glances down at Gittes, who as usual
	is immaculately dressed.

					GITTES
		
190
	Some associates and I are thinking
			of buying property out here -- of
			course, we're worried about the
			rainfall.

	The Rainmaker steps down.

					RAINMAKER
		No problem with me on the Job.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah.
				(glancing around
				 at the desolate,
				 dry field)
			Do you have any references?

159	RAINMAKER & GITTES

					RAINMAKER
			City of La Habra Heights -- filled
			an 800
fa0
,000 gallon reservoir with
			sixteen inches of rain in two
			days.

					GITTES
				(nods)
			That's swell. But how about
			here?
				(pulling out names
				 from his pocket)
			Ever worked for Robert Knox, Emma
			Dill, Clarence Speer, Marian
			Parsons, or Jasper Lamar Crabb?

					RAINMAKER
			Never heard of 'em... new owners?

					GITTES
			-- Yeah.

					RAINMAKER
				(climbing back .up)
			Lot of turnover these days.
			Better tell them to get in touch
			with me if they want to hang onto
			their land.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah, I'll do that.

160	GITTES DRIVING

	is now covered with a film of dust:

	He reaches a fork in the dirt road. There are a couple 
	of mailboxes.

	Gittes takes this fork and begins a slow ascent.

	As he does, the tops of a line of bright green trees
	can be SEEN, coming more and more INTO VIEW, row upon
	row of avocado and walnut groves, their foliage heavy.
	The few structures in the distance are white-washed,
	and well kept, right down to the white-washed stones
	that mark the pathway to the home. Towering above it
	all is a huge wooden water tank.

	Gittes drives through a gate that has "NO TRESPASSING"
	and "KEEP OUT -- PRIVATE PROPERTY" signs neatly printed
	on it.

	He drives down the road into the grove.

161 	GITTES

	pulls to a halt in the road flanking the orchard lanes.
	He puts the car in neutral, stares at the trees. By
	contrast with what he has seen -- they are lush and
	beautiful, their heavy branches barely swaying in a
	light breeze,

	Then a SHOTGUN BLAST abruptly strips bare the branches.
	of the tree he'd been staring at.

162	EXT. AVOCADO GROVES - DAY

	Gittes is shocked. He looks behind him. Riding on
	horseback down the field in the direction he had just
	driven is a Red-Faced Man in overalls. His hat blows
	off his head. He does not, however, lose the shotgun
	he has just used. Gittes' lane of retreat is denied
	him. He guns the car, and takes off down one of the
	orchard lanes.

163	MOVING WITH GITTES

	The dirt lane is rough. As Gittes nears the end of
	it, a Younger Man on a mule blocks the exit.

	Gittes veers a sharp left, knocking a branch off one
	of the trees, heading down one of the cross-lanes. Here
	he's pursued by a scraggly dog that nips at the tires.
	Gittes yells at it.

164	ANGLE ON GROVE

	Two farmers on foot, one using a crutch, run down the
	lanes toward a dust trail rising above the trees --
	they've spotted it -- clearly it's from Gittes' car.

	This hide-and-seek chase between one man on horseback,
	one on a mule and a couple on foot continues up and
	down and across the orchard lanes -- until Gittes'
	front tire and radiator are ruptured by another
	SHOTGUN BLAST.

	Gittes' car veers off, scattering a stray gaggle of
	geese -- and smacks into an avocado tree, shaking loose
	a barrage of the heavy fruit onto Gittes and the car.

	Gittes immediately tries to get out through the branches
	over the back of his car, but he's pulled off it by one
	of the younger farmers -- a huge brute who he begins to
	tussle with -- the Crippled Farmer begins to bang Gittes
	on the back with his crutch. The two of them manage to
	pound Gittes to the ground within moments, where the
	Crippled Farmer continues to whack away at Gittes with
	the crutch.

	The older Red Faced Farmer with the shotgun and the Man
	on a mule ride up.

					RED FACED FARMER
			All right, quit it! Quit now!
			Search the man, see if he's armed.

165	Gittes is hefted half off the ground and the two younger
	Farmers spin him around, going through his clothes.
	Gittes is badly banged up and half out on his feet.
	They toss his wallet, his silver cigarette case, etc.
	on the ground.

					RED FACED FARMER
			I said see if he's armed, not empty
			his pockets.

					BIG FARMER
			-- He ain't armed.

	Gittes leans against the back of his car, breathing
	heavily.

					RED FACED FARMER
			All right, mister -- who you with
			-- water department or the real
			estate office --

165	Gittes' back is to
190
 the Red Faced Farmer. He has trouble
	catching his breath. The Crippled Farmer pokes him rudely in 
	the back with his crutch. Gittes turns sharply.

					GITTES
				(to Crippled Farmer)
			Get away from me!

					CRIPPLED FARMER
			Answer him!

					GITTES
			Touch me with that thing again and
			you'll need a pair of them.

					BIG FARMER
				(shoving Gittes)
			Whyn't you pick on somebody you
fa0
r
			own size?

					RED FACED FARMER
			I said cut that out! Give him
			a chance to say something.

	Gittes looks up at the Red Faced Farmer.

					GITTES
				(reaching down for
				 his wallet)
			Name's Gittes -- I'm a private
			investigator and I'm not with
			either one.

					RED FACED FARMER
			Then what are you doing out here?

					GITTES
			-- Client hired me to see...
			whether or not the water department's
			been irrigating your land.

					RED FACED FARMER
			Irrigating my land?
				(exploding)
			The water department's been sending
			you people to blow up my water
			tanks! They threw poison down
			three of my wells! I call that
			a funny way to irrigate -- who'd
			hire you for a thing like that?

166	Gittes reaches into his pocket -- the paper's on the
	ground. He picks it up.

					GITTES
			Mrs. Evelyn Mulwray --

					BIG FARMER
			Mulwray? That's the son of a
			bitch who's done it to us.

					GITTES
			Mulwray's dead -- you don't know
			what you're talking about, you dumb
			Oakie --

	The Big Farmer takes a swing at Gittes. Gittes kicks him
	squarely in the nuts, knees him in the jaw after he's
	doubled up, and hits him solidly. The Crippled Farmer
	takes careful aim and brings his crutch down on the back
	of Gittes' head. Gittes is knocked to the ground and
	lies still beside the Big Farmer who is writhing in agony
	in the dirt.

					RED FACED FARMER
			Well -- that's that.

167	BLACK SCREEN

	There's a PURLING SOUND, which soon becomes defined into
	the SOUND OF VOICES talking quietly -- about whether to
	move or not to move, doctors, etc.

168	CLOSE - EVELYN MULWRAY

	is staring down at Gittes who's lying in the screened-in
	porch of the farmers. His wife, the Red Faced Farmer,
	and the Big Farmer are there, along with the dog.

	The Red Faced Farmer's wife has set tea out. The farmers
	-- all of them -- now seem awkward and a little
	embarrassed.

169	FRONT PORCH - RED FACE FARMER'S HOUSE -
	REACTION - GITTES - DUSK

	He focuses on Evelyn who sits right next to him. He's
	got dried blood down the side of his face from his nose,
	a huge mouse on his cheek, and his clothes are torn in
	a couple of spots.

					GITTES
				(to Evelyn)
			What's going on?

					DUBOIS
				(quietly, almost as
				 if he were in a
				 hospital)
			-- You didn't look too good, so we
			thought we better call your employer.

	Gittes nods. He checks his watch. He looks out -- It's
	almost evening. Gittes says nothing. The wife of the
	Red Faced Farmer (DUBOIS) looks reproachfully at Dubois.
	Gittes feels the back of his head, It obviously hurts 
	him.

170	EXT. DUBOIS FARMHOUSE - EVENING

	Evelyn and Gittes go out to her car, the cream colored
	Packard. Dubois accompanies them -- along with the Big
	Farmer who is carrying a crate of something. Gittes has
	cleaned himself up a little.

					DUBOIS
			-- Look here, if it's all the same
			with you, we'll get your car patched
			up --If you'll tell me what your
			trousers run you, I'll make good on
			them, Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
			It's okay, Mr. Dubois.

					DUBOIS,
				(to Evelyn)
			-- It's just that they're after
			everybody out here, tearing up our
			irrigation ditches -- trying to make
			our land worthless so they can pick
			it up for twenty-five dollars an
			acre --

	Gittes nods.

					DUBOIS
				(continuing)
			Anyway -- Earl here is sorry, too.
			He wants to give you something to
			take back with you.

	Gittes looks. Earl has the huge crate he's holding brim-
	full of avocados.

					GITTES
			Thanks, Earl.

171	INT. CAR - EVELYN & GITTES - DUSK

	Evelyn driving.

					GITTES
			Thanks for coming...

	Gittes pulls out cigarette case, takes one -- offers one
	to Evelyn who refuses.

					GITTES
			-- That dam is a con job.

					EVELYN 
			What dam?

					GITTES
			The one your husband opposed --
			they're conning L.A. into building
			it, only the water won't go to
			L.A. -- it'll go here.

					EVELYN
			The Valley?

					GITTES
			Everything yo
190
u can see, everything
			around us -- I was at the Hall of
			Records today --
				(whips out papers,
				 turns on the car
				 light)
			-- That bother you?

					EVELYN
			No.

					GITTES
				(looking over papers)
			In the last three months, Robert
			Knox has bought 7,000 acres, Emma
			Dill 12,000 acres, Clarence Speer
			5,000 acres, and Jasper Lamar
			Crabb 25,000 acres.

					EVELYN
			
fa0
Jasper Lamar Crabb?

					GITTES
			Know him?

					EVELYN
			No, I think I'd remember.

					GITTES
			Yeah -- they've been blowing these
			farmers out of here and buying
			their land for peanuts -- Have
			any idea what this land'll be worth
			with a steady water supply? About
			thirty million more than they paid.

					EVELYN
			-- And Hollis knew about it?

					GITTES
			It's why he was killed -- Jasper
			Lamar Crabb -- Jasper Lamar Crabb --

	He's pulling out his wallet, excitedly now, spilling its
	contents onto the seat. He pulls out the obituary column
	he'd folded up earlier in the day.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			We got it. We got it, baby.

					EVELYN
			What? What is it?

					GITTES
			There was a memorial service at
			the Mar Vista Inn today for Jasper
			Lamar Crabb. He died three weeks
			ago.

					EVELYN
			Is that unusual?

					GITTES
			Two weeks ago he bought those
			25,000 acres. That's unusual.

172	EXT. MAR VISTA INN AND REST HOME - NIGHT

	Evelyn's car pulls up before the elegant Spanish rest
	home, its entryway illuminated by streetlights. There
	is a small sign giving the name of the place in elegant
	neon scroll. It sits on the rolling green lawns.

	Gittes gets out of the car with Evelyn. He offers her
	his arm and they go up the walkway to the entrance.

173	INT. MAR VISTA INN AND REST HOME - NIGHT

	Gittes and Evelyn are approached by an unctuous man in
	his forties, with a flower in his buttonhole. He sees
	Evelyn first --

					PALMER
			Hello there, I'm Mr. Palmer. Can
			I help you folks?

	Then he gets a clear look at Gittes -- bruised, trousers
	torn, etc.

					GITTES
			Yes, I sure hope so. It's Dad --
				(indicating his
				 disheveled appearance)
			-- I just can't handle him anymore,
			can I, sweetheart?

	Evelyn shakes her head.

					PALMER
			Oh my goodness.

					GITTES
				(hastily)
			Nothing to do with Dad. It's me, 
			actually.

					EVELYN
			They just don't get along very well.
			Dad's a lamb with anyone else.

					PALMER
				(not so sure)
			Oh -- well -- I don't know --

					GITTES
			Naturally, I want the best for him,
			money is no object -- 

					PALMER
			-- Perhaps if we could meet your
			father --

					GITTES
			There's just one question.

					PALMER
			Of course.

					GITTES
			Do you accept anyone of the Jewish
			persuasion?

	Evelyn can't quite conceal her surprise at the question.

					PALMER
				(very embarrassed)
			I'm sorry -- we don't.

					GITTES
				(smoothly)
			Don't be sorry, neither does Dad.
			Wanted to make sure though, didn't
			we, honey?

174	Evelyn stares back at Gittes, amused and appalled.
	She manages to nod.

					GITTES
			Just to be certain, I wonder if
			you could show us a list of your
			patients?

					PALMER
				(polite but pointed)
			We don't reveal the names of our
			guests as a matter of policy. I
			know you'd appreciate that if your
			father came to live with us.

	Gittes locks eyes with Palmer.

					GITTES
				(confidentially)
			That's exactly what we wanted to
			hear.

					PALMER
			Oh, good.

					GITTES
			I wonder, is it too late for us
			to have a look around?

					PALMER
			I don't think so -- be happy to
			show you --

					GITTES
			Would you mind if we took a stroll
			on our own?

					PALMER
			-- Just, if you will, confine
			yourself to the main building --
			it's nearly bedtime.

					GITTES
			We understand, c'mon, sweetheart.

	He takes Evelyn.

175	INT. PARLOR - EVELYN

	looking. Either by accident or design, the primarily
	octogenarian guests have segregated themselves. In one
	wing, the men are playing pinochle, some are playing
	dominoes -- one elderly gentleman sits. by himself 
	carefully peeling an orange.

	In an adjacent parlor several white-headed ladies work
	on a quilt.

	Gittes grabs Evelyn's hand.

					GITTES
				(quietly)
			They're all here. Every goddam
			name.

	Gittes points to the wall -- it says ACTIVITIES BOARD.
	There are titles -- LAWN BOWLING - B
190
RIDGE - FISHING -
	CROQUET -- below them are the names of the guests,
	entered under certain activities, for certain days.

	After Evelyn looks, she turns to Gittes.

					GITTES
				(continuing;
				 indicating the
				 ancients around
				 them)
			You're looking at the owners of
			a 50,000 acre empire.

					EVELYN
				(astonished)
			They can't be.

					GITTES
			They may not know it -- but 
fa0
they are.

176	Gittes strolls toward the women knitting and working on
	the quilt.

					GITTES
			Hello, girls.

	Two of the ladies giggle. The third continues to busy
	herself with her quilt, off by herself.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Which one of you is Emma Dill?

	Two of them say "she is," and point in different 
	directions. The third gives them a curt look and 
	goes back to her knitting. Gittes approaches her.

					GITTES
			Are you Emma?

	Some old voice is singing softly, "Don't Sit Under the
	Apple Tree."

					EMMA
			-- Yes.

					GITTES
			I've been wanting to meet you.

					EMMA
			Why?

					GITTES
			-- Did you know that you're a very
			wealthy woman?

					EMMA
				(stitching, smiles)
			-- I'm not.

					GITTES
			Well you own a lot of land.

					EMMA
			Not anymore. Oh, some time ago,
			my late husband owned a good deal
			of beach property in Long Beach --
			but we lost it.

	Gittes looks at the quilt. In it is the head of a fish
	-- among the rest of the crazy quilt pattern. Gittes
	spots it.

					GITTES
			That's just lovely.

					EMMA
			Thank you...

177	He looks through the quilt for other pieces of the fish
	-- comes across the tail -- and by it -- the initials 
	A.C.

					GITTES
				(indicating tail)
			-- Where did you get this material?

					EMMA
				(what it sounds like)
			The apple core club --

					GITTES
			-- The apple core?

					EMMA
			No -- the albacore. It's a fish.
			My grandson's a member -- and they
			take very nice care of us.

					GITTES
			How do they do that?

					EMMA
			Give us things -- not just some
			old flag like this, but --

					GITTES-
				(kneeling)
			But what?

					PALMER'S VOICE
			We're a sort of unofficial charity
			of theirs, Mr. Gittes. Would you
			care to come this way? Someone
			wants to see you.

	Gittes looks up, sees Palmer standing in the doorway,
	looking taut and a little drawn. Evelyn is beside him.
	She gestures -- as if there's someone behind Palmer.

	Gittes rises.

					GITTES
			See you later, Emma.

	He walks toward Palmer who waits for him to walk in
	front.

178	AT THE ENTRANCE HALL - MULVIHILL

	Is waiting. He's got his hand in his pocket. Evelyn
	looks to Gittes. The four of them stand there, Mulvihill
	towering over everyone.

					MULVIHILL
			Come on -- I want you to meet
			somebody, Gittes.

					GITTES
				(glancing from Palmer
				 to Mulvihill)
			Can -- we leave the lady out of
			this?

					MULVIHILL
				(a little uncertain)
			-- Yeah, why not?

					GITTES
			Okay, I'd like to walk her to her
			car.

					EVELYN
			I'll stay.

				GITTES
				(taking her by the
				 arm)
			Get in the car.

				MULVIHILL
			I'll see she makes it.

	Mulvihill has walked up beside Gittes. He makes the 
	mistake of opening the glass door in the entryway, 
	putting his back to Gittes for a moment. Gittes swiftly
	pulls Mulvihill's jacket up over his head. He spins him
	around. With his jacket covering his face, Gittes hammers
	away at Mulvihlll, beating him against the glass door, 
	along the wall, mercilessly pounding his fists into the 
	cloth until the cloth turns red and Mulvihill begins to 
	sink to the red tile floor. Palmer screams. Evelyn stands 
	there astonished. Mulvihill's gun has clattered to the 
	floor.

					GITTES
				(as Mulvihill hits
				 the floor, to Evelyn)
			What are you waiting for? Get in
			the car!

	Evelyn goes.

179	Mulvihill tries to get up again. Palmer starts to go for
	the gun, nearly picking it up. Gittes slaps it out of
	his hand and kicks it. It goes flying down the hall, at
	least thirty feet; hits the wall. Palmer goes screaming
	off into the night. Gittes turns back to Mulvihill who
	starts to get up, then collapses.

	Gittes goes out the front door, ignoring the excited
	audience of ancients behind him.

180	OUTSIDE

	As Gittes walks down the pathway, he stops -- two men are
	coming toward him. One of them is shorter, and has the
	nervous, jerky moves of the man who slit his nose.

	G
190
ittes stops. The two men fan out and continue to move
	toward him. Gittes spots the two-tone shoes. He begins 
	to back up.

	Suddenly there is a pair of headlights flashing
	brilliantly behind the two men. In a moment Evelyn's car 
	is headed across the lawn directly toward the two men,
	accelerating as it gets near them. They look in 
	disbelief, then dive for safety. The car skids to a stop,
	f
fa0
ishtailing a little on the grass.

	Evelyn opens the passenger door.

					EVELYN
			Get in.

	Gittes jumps in and she takes off across the lawn, 
	tilting the elegant little neon sign on the lawn as 
	she goes. Two SHOTS ARE FIRED.

181	INT. CAR - EVELYN & GITTES

	Evelyn looking straight ahead, driving. After a moment
	she takes one hand off the wheel and rubs her left eye a
	little. Gittes watches her. He smiles.

182	EXT. VERANDA - MULWRAY HOME - NIGHT

	Gittes stands on the veranda, smoking a cigarette, 
	staring off into the night.

	Evelyn comes out to the veranda, carrying a tray with
	whiskey and an ice bucket on it. She sets it down --
	Gittes turns.

					GITTES
				(watching her pour)
			Maid's night off?

					EVELYN
			Why?

					GITTES
				(a little surprised,
				 he laughs)
			What do you mean, 'why?' Nobody's
			here, that's all.

					EVELYN
				(handing Gittes his
				 drink)
			-- I gave everybody the night off --

					GITTES
			-- Easy, It's an innocent question.

					EVELYN
			No question from you is innocent,
			Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
				(laughing)
			I guess not -- to you, Mrs. Mulwray.
			Frankly you really saved my a--
			my neck tonight.

	They drink.

					EVELYN
			Tell me something -- does this
			usually happen to you, Mr. Gittes?

					GITTES
			What's that, Mrs. Mulwray?

					EVELYN
			-- Well, I'm only judging on the
			basis of one afternoon and an evening,
			but if that's how you go about your
			work, I'd say you're lucky to get
			through a whole day.

				GITTES
				(pouring himself
				 another drink)
			-- Actually this hasn't happened
			to me in some time.

					EVELYN
			-- When was the last time?

					GITTES 
			Why?

					EVELYN
			Just -- I don't know why.
			I'm asking.

	Gittes touches his nose, winces a little.

					GITTES
			It was in Chinatown.

					EVELYN
			What were you doing there?

					GITTES
				(taking a long drink)
			-- Working for the District Attorney.

					EVELYN 
			Doing what?

	Gittes looks sharply at her. Then:

					GITTES
			As little as possible.

					EVELYN
			The District Attorney gives his
			men advice like that?

					GITTES
			They do in Chinatown.

	She looks at him. Gittes stares off into the night.

	Evelyn has poured herself another drink.

					EVELYN
			Bothers you to talk about it,
			doesn't It?

	Gittes gets up.

					GITTES
			No -- I wonder -- could I -- do
			you have any peroxide or something?

	He touches his nose lightly.

					EVELYN
			Oh sure. C'mon.

	She takes his hand and leads him back into the house.

184	INT. BATHROOM - MIRROR

	Gittes pulls the plaster off his nose, stares at it in
	the mirror. Evelyn takes some hydrogen peroxide and some
	cotton out of a medicine cabinet. Evelyn turns Gittes'
	head toward her. She has him sit on the pullman tile
	adjacent to the sink.

					EVELYN
			Doctor did a nice job...

	She begins to work on his nose with the peroxide. Then 
	she sees his cheek -- checks back in his hair.--


					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			-- Boy oh boy, you're a mess

					GITTES
			-- Yeah --

					EVELYN
				(working on him)
			-- So why does it bother you to
			talk about it... Chinatown...

					GITTES
			-- Bothers everybody who works
			there -- but to me -- It was --

	Gittes shrugs.

					EVELYN
			-- Hold still -- why?

					GITTES
			-- You can't always tell what's
			going on there --

					EVELYN
			... No -- why was it --

					GITTES
			I thought I was keeping someone
			from being hurt and actually I ended
			up making sure they were hurt.

					EVELYN
			Could you do anything about it?

185	They're very close now as she's going over a mouse very
	near his eye.

					GITTES
			Yeah -- make sure I don't find
			myself in Chinatown anymore --
			wait a second --

	He takes hold of her and pulls her even closer,

					EVELYN
				(momentarily freezing)
			-- What's wrong?

					GITTES
			Your eye.

					EVELYN
			What about it?

					GITTES
				(staring intently)
			There's something black in
190
 the
			green part of your eye.

					EVELYN
				(not moving)
			Oh that... It's a flaw in the
			iris...

					GITTES
			... A flaw...

					EVELYN
			(she almost shivers)
			... Yes, sort of a birthmark...

	Gittes kisses her lightly, gradually rises until he's
	standing holding her. She hesitates, then wraps her arms
	around him.

186 	INT. MULWRAY BEDROOM - TELEPHONE

	on a nightstand, city li
fa0
ghts visible through the open
	window behind it. It is RINGING. Evelyn's arm reaches
	INT0 SHOT. SOUND of something hitting the headboard.
	Gittes moans.

	VIEW SHIFTS TO INCLUDE Gittes in bed, holding his head,
	which he's just hit. Evelyn pauses in her reach to the
	phone. She turns to him, whispers, "I'm sorry," kisses
	him on the head and lips. PHONE CONTINUES TO RING. She
	picks it up.

					EVELYN
			Hello...
				(in Spanish now)
			No, no, I'll come and help,
			just keep watching her and don't
			do anything until I get there...
			'bye.

	VIEW SHIFTS AGAIN TO INCLUDE Gittes in bed, watching
	Evelyn next to him as she's talking on the phone. She
	hangs up. She touches Gittes' cheek lightly.

					EVELYN
			I have to go.

	Gittes stares at her silently.

					GITTES
			Where?

					EVELYN
			-- Just -- I have to.

					GITTES
			And I want to know where.

					EVELYN
				(she starts out of
				 bed)
			Please don't be angry... believe
			me, it's got nothing to do with
			you --

					GITTES
				(stopping her)
			Where are you going?

					EVELYN
				(near tears)
			Please!... Trust me this much...
				(she kisses him
				 lightly)
			I'll be back -- look, there is
			something I should tell you. The
			fishing club that old lady mentioned,
			the pieces off the flag --

					GITTES
			The Albacore Club.

					EVELYN
			It has to do with my father.

					GITTES 
			I know.

					EVELYN
			He owns it. You know?

					GITTES
			I saw him.

					EVELYN
				(sitting up straight)
			You saw my fa -- father? When?

					GITTES
			This morning.

					EVELYN
				(panicked)
			You didn't tell me.

					GITTES
			There hasn't been a lot of time.

187	She leaps out of bed, throwing on a robe.

					EVELYN
			What did he say?
				(insistent)
			What did he say ?

					GITTES
			-- That you were jealous, and
			he was worried about what you
			might do.

					EVELYN
			Do? To who?

					GITTES
			Mulwray's girlfriend, for one
			thing. He wanted to know where
			she was.

	Evelyn starts quickly for the bathroom, then comes back
	and kneels by the side of the bed, takes Gittes' hand.

					EVELYN
			I want you to listen to me -- my
			father is a very dangerous man.
			You don't know how dangerous. You
			don't know how crazy.

					GITTES
			Give me an example.

					EVELYN
			You may think you know what's going
			on, but you don't.

					GITTES
			That's what your father said --
			you're telling me he's in back of
			this whole thing?

					EVELYN
			It's possible.

					GITTES
			Including the death of your husband?

					EVELYN
			It's possible -- please don't ask
			me any more questions now. Just
			wait, wait for me -- I'll be back.
			I need you here.

	She kisses him, rushes to the bathroom, shuts the door.
	Gittes stares at it a moment. Then leaps out of bed,
	rummages around, tosses on his trousers. He grabs his
	shoes, throws them on. Then hurries out of the bedroom.

188	EXT. MULWRAY HOME - GITTES

	running across the driveway to the garage. There are two
	cars there -- Mulwray's Buick and Evelyn's Packard.

	Gittes moves over to the Buick, opens the passenger's
	door.

188	INT. BUICK- GITTES

	checks the ignition. No key is in it. He pulls a couple
	of wires from under the dash -- starts to mess with them,
	seems satisfied. Slides out across the seat, slams the
	door.

190	EXT. MULWRAY DRIVEWAY - NIGHT

	Gittes hurries over to the Packard. He gets down on the
	driveway, lying on his back, bracing himself. With the
	heel of his shoe, he kicks at the right rear taillight of
	the car. He shatters the red lens, gets up. He carefully
	pulls the red lens off the taillight, exposing the white
	light beneath it. He tosses the red lens into the 
	shrubbery and hurries back toward the house.

191	ONE RED AND ONE WHITE TAILLIGHT - MOVING - NIGHT

	Evelyn's car speeds along the curves on Sunset Boulevard,
	the red and white lights coming IN AND OUT OF VIEW.

192	GITTES DRIVING - NIGHT

	behind the wheel of Mulwray's car, keeping 
190
a healthy
	distance from Evelyn in front of him. .

193	EVELYN'S PACKARD

	pulls up before a small little bungalow-house. She gets
	out, looks up and down the street. There is nothing.
	She hurries on up the walkway to the front door.

194	DOWN THE STREET - GITTES IN BUICK

	Idles the engine with the lights off. He brings the car
	a few yards further down the street, parking it near
	Evelyn's.

	G
fa0
ittes gets out of the car and goes up the walkway. 
	The curtains are drawn except for one of the small 
	windows on the side of the house. He goes to it and 
	looks, balancing on the edge of the porch.

195	THROUGH THE WINDOW

	Gittes sees Evelyn's Oriental servant rush through the
	living room of the small house. In a moment he re-emerges
	back through the living room carrying a tray with a glass
	and pitcher on it.

196	GITTES

	around to the side of the house. He runs into shrubbery
	and a short picket fence.

	He climbs over it, follows along the stucco wall to a
	series of windows at the corner of the house. These all
	have shades on them. He can hear someone crying in the
	house. Someone else talking alternately firmly and 
	plaintively in Spanish. Here the windows have blinds. 
	He moves to one where the blind is not completely drawn 
	-- there's an inch or so of space at the bottom.

197	THROUGH THE WINDOW

	Gittes can see the servant again. Evelyn is pacing back
	and forth in and out of his line of vision. After a 
	moment someone rises INTO SHOT -- obviously from lying 
	on a bed. The figure is just a few feet from Evelyn. Her
	tear-stained face comes INTO VIEW. It is unmistakably 
	the girl Gittes had last seen with Hollis Mulwray. 
	Mulwray's girlfriend. She's looking up to Evelyn, 
	speaking in Spanish -- her words are not discernible 
	but the tone is -- bitter, anguished. A newspaper is 
	strewn about the room.

	Evelyn kneels. She insists that the girl swallow down
	some pills. The girl reluctantly does.

198	GITTES

	continues to watch.

199 	EXT. STREET - EVELYN - NIGHT

	emerges from the house, goes to her car and gets in.

200	INT. CAR

	Evelyn sees Gittes sitting in her car, staring coldly
	at her.

					GITTES
			Okay, give me the keys.

					EVELYN
				(stunned, furious)
			You bastard.

					GITTES
			-- It's either that or you drive
			to the police yourself..

					EVELYN
			The police?

					GITTES
			C'mon, Mrs. Mulwray -- you've got
			your husband's girlfriend tied up
			in there!

					EVELYN
			She's not tied up!

					GITTES
			You know what I mean. You're
			keeping her there against her will.

					EVELYN
			I am not!

					GITTES
			Then let's go talk to her.

201	Gittes starts to get out of the car. Evelyn grabs his
	arm, nearly screaming:

					EVELYN
			No!

	Her intensity actually rips Gittes' already partially
	torn jacket. He looks at it and her. It seems to have
	a momentary calming effect on both of them.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			She's too upset.

					GITTES
			What about?

					EVELYN
			Hollis' death. I tried to keep
			it from her, I didn't want her
			upset before I could make plans
			for her to leave.

					GITTES
			You mean she just found out?

					EVELYN
			Yes.

					GITTES
			That's not what it looks like,
			Mrs. Mulwray.

					EVELYN
			What does it look like?

					GITTES
			Like she knows about Hollis' death
			-- like she knows more than you
			want her to tell.

					EVELYN
			You're insane.

	Gittes explodes.

					GITTES
			Just tell me the truth -- I'm not
			the police. I don't care what
			you've done. I'm not going to
			hurt you -- but one way or another
			I'm going to know.

					EVELYN
			You won't go to the police if I
			tell you?

					GITTES
			I will if you don't.

	A long pause. Evelyn's head sinks onto the steering
	wheel, her hair covering her face.

					EVELYN
			She's my sister.

202	Evelyn is breathing very deeply now -- not crying, but
	the kind of deep breathing that comes from real hysteria.
	Gittes puts an arm on her shoulder.

					GITTES
			Take it easy... If it's your sister
			it's your sister... why all the
			secrecy?

	She lifts her head and looks up at him. He's genuinely
	puzzled.
					EVELYN
				(really upset)
			I can't...

					GITTES
			Because of Hollis? Because she
			was seeing your husband? Was that
			it? Jesus Christ, say something.
			Was that it?

	She nods. Gittes sighs.

					EVELYN
				(finally)
			I would 
190
never ever have harmed
			Hollis. I loved him more than my
			own family. He was the most gentle,
			decent man imaginable... and he
			put up with more from me than
			you'll ever know... I just wanted
			him to be happy...

	She begins to cry softly.

					GITTES
				(after a moment)
			-- I took your husband's Buick...
				(he opens the car
				 door)
			I'll return it tomorrow.

					EVELYN
		
fa0
	Aren't you coming back with me?

					GITTES
			-- Don't worry. I'm not telling
			anybody about this.

					EVELYN
			... That's not what I meant.

	There is a long moment of silence. Gittes looks over to
	Evelyn. Her hair covers most of her face from him.

					GITTES
				(finally)
			Yeah, well... I'm very tired,
			Mrs. Mulwray. Good night.

	He gets out and slams the car door. She drives off.

203	INT. SHOWER - GITTES' APARTMENT - GITTES

	The spray is hitting him full on the top of the head.
	Gittes is so exhausted he's literally holding onto the
	nozzle as the water pours down. He shuts the shower off,
	reaches weakly for a towel -- dabs his nose lightly with
	it.

204	INT. GITTES' BEDROOM - GITTES

	pads around in elegant silk pajamas.

	He walks over to the window where morning light is 
	streaming in. He closes the curtains, collapses on the 
	bed,on top of the covers, inert. Almost immediately the
	PHONE RINGS. Gittes lets it go on for a moment, then
	picks it up without saying anything.

					VOICE ON PHONE
				(male)
			Gittes?... Gittes?

					GITTES
			-- Yeah.

					VOICE ON PHONE
			Ida Sessions wants to see you.

					GITTES
			Who?

					VOICE 0N PHONE
			Ida Sessions, you remember Ida.

	Gittes slowly rises to one elbow.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah?... I do?

					VOICE ON PHONE
			Sure you do.

					GITTES
			-- Well, tell you what, pal. If
			Ida wants to see me she can call
			me -- at my office.

	He hangs up, falls back down. PHONE RINGS AGAIN.
	AND AGAIN. Gittes swears, picks it up.

					VOICE ON PHONE
			684 1/2 East Tensington -- Echo
			Park. She begged me to call.
			She's waiting for you.

	Before Gittes can say anything, the phone clicks dead.

205	EXT..CERRITOS TOWER ROAD - HOLLYWOOD HILLS - 
	EARLY MORNING

	Gittes pulls up. It is a bungalow courtyard with a
	very narrow walkway and sickly green stucco.

206	EXT. IDA SESSIONS' APARTMENT - DAY

	Gittes at the front door. It's slightly ajar. He knocks.
	Nothing. He opens it and enters.

207	INT. LIVING ROOM

	Morning light filters through the half-open blinds. Dust
	particles in the shafts of light. It's still and empty.
	Gittes sees something down the hall, under the legs of a
	telephone table. Gittes moves toward it. It is grotesque.
	When he gets closer he can see it's a wilted head of
	lettuce. Just inside the kitchen some radishes and onions
	lie on the linoleum. Gittes walks on into the kitchen.

208 INT. KITCHEN

	Clearing the kitchen counter, Gittes sees IDA SESSIONS
	lying on her back on the floor, surrounded by the 
	groceries from a broken bag. Ice cream has melted around 
	her. Her eyes are open, a stream of ants is moving across 
	the ice cream and into her mouth. She's recognizable as
	the woman who posed as Evelyn Mulwray.

	Gittes kneels over her. He gingerly opens her handbag,
	fishes for its contents, takes them and looks at them on
	the kitchen counter -- wallet with a few bills in it,
	driver's license. with her name -- a Screen Actors Guild
	card. Gittes nods -- turns, carefully replaces the items
	in the purse.

	He idly opens the broom closet, pantry, and even 
	Frigidaire -- which is all but empty. Then he steps over 
	her body and moves across the hall to a door that is
	slightly ajar.

209	INT. BATHROOM

	Gittes enters and turns on the light.

					ESCOBAR
			Find anything interesting, Gittes?

	Escobar and another PLAINCLOTHED MAN stand in the 
	bathroom by the entrance to the bedroom door. Gittes 
	turns around. A THIRD MAN is now coming down the hall 
	from the bedroom.

	Gittes looks at the two, doesn't reply.

					ESCOBAR
			What are you doing here?

					GITTES
			Didn't you call?

					ESCOBAR
				(jerk of his head
				 toward the kitchen)
			How do you happen to know her?

					GITTES 
			I don't.

 					ESCOBAR
 			(turning toward
			 other room)
			-- Let me show you something.

210	INT. KITCHEN

	Escobar points to the number MU 7279 on the side of one
	of the kitchen cabinets.

					ESCOBAR
			Isn't that your 
190
number?

					GITTES
			Is it? I forget. I don't call
			myself that often.

					ESCOBAR
			Just to be on the safe side, we
			had Loach here give you a ring.

	He indicates one of his assistants.

					ESCOBAR'S ASSISTANT
				(a slight sneer)
			What happened to your nose, Gittes?
			Somebody slam a bedroom window on it?

					GITTES
				(right back, smiling)
			Nope, your wife got excited, cros
fa0
sed
			her legs a little too quick. You
			understand, pal.

	The Assistant starts to move for Gittes who is ready for
	him. Escobar steps between the two.

					ESCOBAR
				(to other Assistant)
			Loach.
				(Escobar pulls out
				 a drawer)
			How about these? Look familiar?

	In the open drawer are the photos of Mulwray and the
	girl in the park, boat, and at the El Macando on the
	veranda.

					GITTES
				(no point in denying it)
			Yeah, I took 'em. So what?

					ESCOBAR
			How did she --
				(meaning the corpse)
			-- happen to have them?

	Gittes takes a deep breath.

					GITTES
			Either you tell me or I guess -
			'cause I don't have the answer.

	Escobar nods.

					ESCOBAR
			You really think I'm stupid, don't
			you, Gittes?

					GITTES
			I don't think about it one way or
			the other. But if you want, give
			me a day or two, and I'll get
			back to you. Now I'd like to go
			home.

					ESCOBAR
			I want the rest of the pictures.

					GITTES
			What pictures?

					ESCOBAR
				(meaning the corpse)
			This broad hired you, Gittes, not
			Evelyn Mulwray.

					GITTES 
			Yeah?

					ESCOBAR
			Yeah -- somebody wanted to shake
			down Mulwray, she hired you, and
			that's how you happen to know
			Mulwray was murdered.

					GITTES
			I heard it was an accident.

					ESCOBAR
			C'mon, you think you're dealing
			with a bunch of assholes? Mulwray
			had salt water in his goddam lungs!
			Now how did he get that... in a fresh
			water reservoir?

211	Gittes is surprised at this piece of information, but
	remains nonplussed.

					ESCOBAR
			You were following him night and
			day You saw who killed him.
			You even took pictures of it.
			It was Evelyn Mulwray -- she's
			been paying you off like a slot
			machine ever since her husband
			died.

					GITTES
				(smiling)
			You accusing me of extortion?

					ESCOBAR
			Absolutely.

					GITTES
			-- I don't think I need a day or
			two -- you're even dumber than
			you think I think you are. Not
			only that, I'd never extort a nickel
			out of my worst enemy, that's where
			I draw the line, Escobar.

					ESCOBAR
			Yeah, I once knew a whore who for
			enough money would piss in a
			customer's face -- but she'd never
			shit on his chest. That's where
			she drew the line.

					GITTES
				(smiling)
			Well, I hope she wasn't too much
			of a disappointment to you, Lou.

	Escobar manages a thin smile.

					ESCOBAR
			I want those photographs, Gittes.
			We're talking about accessory after
			the fact, conspiracy, and extortion
			-- minimum.

					GITTES
			Why do you think Mulwray's body
			was moved you dimwit? Evelyn
			Mulwray knocked off her husband
			in the ocean -- and thought it
			would look like more of an accident
			if she hauled him up to the Oak
			Pass Reservoir?

	This is a little telling.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Mulwray was murdered and moved --
			because somebody didn't want his
			body found in the ocean.

					ESCOBAR
			And why's that ?

					GITTES
			He found out somebody was dumping
			water there. That's what they
			were trying to cover up by moving
			him.

	This stops Escobar. He's dumbfounded by it.

					ESCOBAR
			What are you talking about?

					GITTES
			C'mon I'll show you.

	Escobar hesitates.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			C'mon - make a decision, Lou.
			You're in charge.

	The men around Escobar look to him. Escobar grudgingly
	nods.

212	CLOSE SHOT - STORM DRAIN

	It yawns AT CAMERA, only a trickle of water dropping into
	the ocean.

	VIEW WIDENS TO INCLUDE Escobar, Gittes, and two Plain-
	clothesmen, standing and staring at the empty pipe as if
	they expect it to talk.

					GITTES
				(squinting in sunlight)
			It's too late.

					ESCOBAR
			Too late for what?

					GITTES
			They only dump the water at night.

	A THIRD ASSISTANT runs down the side of the cliff and 
	Over to Escobar.

					ESCOBAR
			Reach anybody?

					THIRD ASSISTANT
			Yelburton, he's the new chief.

					ESCOBAR
			I know who he
190
 is. Well?

					THIRD ASSISTANT
			He says --

					GITTES
			I know what he says.

					ESCOBAR
				(to Gittes)
			Shut up.
				(to Assistant)
			Go on.

					THIRD ASSISTANT
			Yelburton says they're irrigating
			in the valley -- there's always a
			little runoff when they do that.
			And he says is Gittes knows that,
			and has been going around making
			irresponsible accusations for the
			
fa0
last week.

	Escobar turns to Gittes. Stares at him for a long moment.

					ONE OF ASSISTANTS
			Let's swear out a warrant for her
			arrest. What are we waiting for?

					GITTES
				(meaning Escobar)
			-- Because he just made lieutenant,
			and he wants to hang onto his
			little gold bar.

	Escobar stares hatefully at Gittes.

					ESC0BAR
			Have your client in my office in
			two hours -- and remember. I
			don't have to let you go. I've
			got you for withholding evidence
			right now.

214	EXT. MULWRAY HOME - DAY

	Gittes in Mulwray's Buick whips into the driveway. He
	looks in the garage. Evelyn's car is gone. Only the
	Gardener's truck is there.

	Gittes hurries along the pathway and up to the house.
	He rings the doorbell. Scarcely waiting for an answer
	he tries it. It's locked. He reaches into his pocket
	-- pulls out his cigarette case, takes a pick out of
	the side and starts to fool with the lock.

	The Maid opens the door abruptly, stares in some surprise
	at Gittes.

					GITTES
			Where's Mrs. Mulwray?

					MAID
			No esta.

215	Gittes looks past the Maid to the center of the living
	room -- where luggage is packed and neatly piled.

	The Maid is actually in the process of throwing covers
	over the furniture.

					GITTES
				(indicating luggage)
			Is Mrs. Mulwray going someplace?...
				(no answer)
			on a trip?... vacation?...

					MAID
			No esta in casa.

	Gittes nods. He continues through the house and out back
	to the veranda.

216	EXT. MULWRAY VERANDA - GITTES

	is unsettled. Sees the Gardener working by the pond.
	He wanders a few yards in that direction.

217	GARDENER

	spots Gittes, half-bows, nods and smiles.

218	GITTES

	in turn, nods, smiles.

					GITTES
			-- bad for glass.

219	GARDENER

	breaks into a big grin. Nods again.

					GARDENER
			Oh yes, bad for glass.

He points to the newly mown lawn.

					GARDENER
				(continuing)
			Salt water velly bad for glass.

220	GITTES

	can't quite believe what he's heard,

					GITTES
			Salt water?

	The Gardener nods vigorously. Points to the pond.

					GARDENER
			Velly velly bad.

	Gittes has moved to the pond. He kneels. Clinging to the
	edge of it he can now see as he could have before if he'd
	looked closely, a starfish.

221	CLOSE STARFISH

	It has one leg missing. The fifth point on the star is
	Just beginning to grow back.

222	GITTES

	touches the water, tastes it. He licks his lips, then
	spots something glinting in the bottom of the pond.

					GITTES
			What's that... down there?

	The Gardener peers into the pond.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			... there.

	The Gardener spots it. He rolls up his trousers, gets in
	the pond, and reaches into the bottom, his chin actually
	touching the water. He misses the object, which seems to
	scoot away like an animal. Then he grasps it. He lifts it 
	out of the water and holds a pair of eye glasses, 
	rimless, bent, his finger poking through the frame where 
	one lens is shattered.

	The Gardener seems surprised. Gittes looks at the 
	glasses. They are heavily bifocal and reflect the sun.

223	INT. MULWRAY HOME

	Gittes holds the phone to his ear. On the telephone 
	table, lying on his handkerchief are the glasses.

	The Maid hovers around over Gittes' shoulder, uneasily
	watching him.

					CROSS' VOICE
			Hello.

					GITTES
			Have you got your checkbook handy,
			Mr. Cross? I've got the girl.

					CROSS' VOICE
			-- you've got her? Where?

					GITTES
			Do you remember the figures we
			discussed?

					CROSS' VOICE
			Of course I do. Where are you?

					GITTES
			-- at your daughter's house.
			How soon can you get here?

					CROSS' VOICE
			Two hours... tell me, will
			Evelyn be there as well?

					GITTES
			Either that or she'll be in jail.

					CROSS' VOICE
			What are you talking about?

					GITTES
			Just bring your checkbook.

	Gittes hangs up.

224	EXT. BUNGALOW-HOUSE - ADELAIDE DRIVE

	Gittes pulls up in Mulwray's Buick. He hurries to the 
	front door, pounds on it.

	Th
190
e Chinese servant answers the door.

					CHINESE SERVANT
			You wait.

					GITTES
				(short sentence in
				 Chinese)
			You wait.

225	Gittes pushes past him. Evelyn, looking a little worn but
	glad to see him hurries to the door. She takes Gittes' 
	arm.

					EVELYN
			How are you? I was calling you.

	She looks at him, searching his face.

					GITTES
			-- Yeah?

	They move into the living
fa0
 room. Gittes is looking around
	it.

					EVELYN
			Did you get some sleep?

					GITTES
			Sure.

					EVELYN
			Did you have lunch?
			Kyo will fix you something --

					GITTES
				(abruptly).
			-- where's the girl?

					EVELYN
			Upstairs. Why?

					GITTES
			I want to see her.

					EVELYN
			...she's having a bath now... why
			do you want to see her?

	Gittes continues to look around. He sees clothes laid out
	for packing in a bedroom off the living room.

					GITTES
			Going somewhere?

					EVELYN
			Yes, we've got a 4:30 train to
			catch. Why?

	Gittes doesn't answer. He goes to the phone and dials.

					GITTES
			J. J. Gittes for Lieutenant
			Escobar

					EVELYN
			What are you doing? What's wrong?
			I told you we've got a 4:30 --

					GITTES
				(cutting her off)
			You're going to miss your train!
				(then, into phone)
			Lou, meet me at 1412 Adelaide
			-- it's above Santa Monica
			Canyon... yeah, soon as you can.

					EVELYN
			What did you do that for?

					GITTES
				(a moment, then)
			You know any good criminal lawyers?

					EVELYN
				(puzzled)
			-- no...

					GITTES
			Don't worry -- I can recommend a
			couple. They're expensive but you
			can afford it.

					EVELYN
				(evenly but with
				 great anger)
			What the hell is this all about?

	Gittes looks at her -- then takes the handkerchief out 
	Of his breast pocket -- unfolds it on a coffee table, 
	revealing the bifocal glasses, one lens still intact. 
	Evelyn stares dumbly at them.

					GITTES
			I found these in your backyard --
			in your fish pond. They belonged to
			your husband, didn't they?... didn't
			they?

					EVELYN
			I don't know. I mean yes, probably.

					GITTES
			-- yes positively. That's where
			he was drowned...

					EVELYN
			What are you saying?

					GITTES
			There's no time for you to be
			shocked by the truth, Mrs. Mulwray.
			The coroner's report proves he was
			killed in salt water. Just take my
			word for it. Now I want to know
			how it happened and why. I want
			to know before Escobar gets here
			because I want to hang onto my
			license.

					EVELYN
			-- I don't know what you're talking
			about. This is the most insane...
			the craziest thing I ever...

	Gittes has been in a state of near frenzy himself.
	gets up, shakes her.

					GITTES
			Stop it! - I'll make it easy. --
			You were jealous, you fought, he
			fell, hit his head -- it was an
			accident -- but his girl is a
			witness. You've had to pay her
			off. You don't have the stomach
			to harm her, but you've got the
			money to shut her up. Yes or no?

					EVELYN
			... no...

					GITTES
			Who is she? And don't give me that
			crap about it being your sister.
			You don't have a sister.

	Evelyn is trembling.

					EVELYN
			I'll tell you the truth...

	Gittes smiles.

					GITTES
			That's good. Now what's her name?

					EVELYN
			-- Katherine.

					GITTES
			Katherine?... Katherine who?

					EVELYN
			-- she's my daughter.

226	Gittes stares at her. He's been charged with anger and
	when Evelyn says this it explodes. He hits her full in
	the face. Evelyn stares back at him. The blow has forced
	tears from her eyes, but she makes no move, not even to
	defend herself.

					GITTES
			I said the truth!

					EVELYN
			-- she's my sister --

	Gittes slaps her again.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			-- she's my daughter.

	Gittes slaps her again.
					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			-- my sister.

	He hits her again.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			My daughter, my sister --

	He belts her finally, knocking her into a cheap Chinese
	vase which shatters and she collapses on the sofa,
	sobbing.

					GITTES
			I said I want the truth.

					EVELYN
				(almost screaming it)
			She's my sister and my daughter!

	Kyo comes running down the stairs.

					EVELYN
				(continuing;
				 in Chinese)
			For God's sake, Kyo, keep her
			upstairs, go back!

	Kyo turns after staring at Gittes for a moment then
	goes back upstairs.

					EVEL
190
YN
				(continuing)
			-- my father and I, understand,
			or is it too tough for you?

	Gittes doesn't answer.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			... he had a breakdown... the
			dam broke... my mother died...
			he became a little boy... I was
			fifteen... he'd ask me what to
			eat for breakfast, what clothes
			to wear!... It happened... then
			I ran away...

					GITTES
			to Mexico...

	She n
fa0
ods.

					EVELYN
			Hollis came and took... care
			of me... after she was born...
			he said... he took care of her...
			I couldn't see her... I wanted to
			but I couldn't... I just want to
			see her once in a while... take care
			of her... that's all... but I don't 
			want her to know... I don't want 
			her to know...

					GITTES.
			... so that's why you hate him...

	Evelyn looks slowly up at Gittes.

					EVELYN
			-- no... for turning his back on
			me after it happened! He couldn't
			face it...
				(weeping)
			I hate him.

	Gittes suddenly feels the need to loosen his tie.

					GITTES
			-- yeah... where are you taking her
			now?

					EVELYN
			Back to Mexico.

					GITTES
			You can't go by train. Escobar'll
			be looking for you everywhere.

					EVELYN
			How about a plane?

					GITTES
			That's worse... Just get out of
			here -- walk out, leave everything.

					EVELYN
			I have to go home and get my things --

					GITTES
			-- I'll take care of it.

 					EVELYN
			Where can we go?

					GITTES
			...where does Kyo live?

					EVELYN
			-- with us.

					GITTES
			On his day off. Get the exact
			address.

					EVELYN
			-- okay...

	She stops suddenly.

					EVELYN
			Those didn't belong to Hollis.

	For a moment Gittes doesn't know what she's talking 
	about. Then he follows her gaze to the glasses lying on 
	his handkerchief.

					GITTES
			How do you know?

					EVELYN
			He didn't wear bifocals.

	Gittes picks up the glasses, stares at the lens, is
	momentarily lost in them.

227	EVELYN

	from the stairs. She has her arm around Katherine.

					EVELYN
			Say hello to Mr. Gittes, sweetheart.

					KATHERINE
				(from the stairs)
			Hello.

228	GITTES

	rises a little shakily from the arm of the sofa.


					GITTES
			Hello.

	With her arm around the girl, talking in Spanish, 
	Evelyn hurries her toward the bedroom. In a moment she 
	re-emerges.

					EVELYN
				(calling down)
			-- he lives at 1712 Alameda... do
			you know where that is?

229	REACTION - GITTES

	He nods slowly.

					GITTES
			-- sure. It's Chinatown.

230	THRU WINDOW

	of bungalow Gittes watches Evelyn, the girl and Kyo head
	for Kyo's black dusty sedan.

	Gittes drops the curtain, heads swiftly to the phone. He
	dials.

					GITTES
			Sophie... is Walsh there?... yeah,
			listen, pal, Escobar's going to try
			and book me in about five minutes...
			relax, I'll tell you. Wait in the
			office for two hours. If you don't
			hear from me, you and Duffy meet me
			at 1712 Alameda.

					WALSH'S VOICE
			-- Jesus, that's in Chinatown, ain't
			it?

231	The front BELL RINGS.

					GITTES
			I know where it is! Just do it.

	Gittes hangs up and goes to the door. He opens it. No
	one is there.

					GITTES
				(not even bothering
				 to look around the
				 sides)
			Come on in, Lou -- we're both too
			late.

	Escobar and his minions appear from either side of the
	door.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Looks like she flew the coop.

	Escobar nods.

					ESCOBAR
			I don't suppose you got any idea
W			here she went?

					GITTES
			Matter of fact I do.

					ESCOBAR
			Where?

					GITTES
			Her maid's house. I think she
			knows something's up.

					ESCOBAR
			What's the maid's address?

					GITTES
			She lives in Pedro -- I'll write it
			down for you --

					ESCOBAR
			No, Gittes, you'll show us.

					GITTES 
			What for?

					ESCOBAR
			If she's not there, you're going
			downtown, and you're staying there
			til she shows up.

					GITTES
				(deliberately
				 petulant)
			Gee, Lou, I'm doing the best I can.

					ESCOBAR
				(shoving him toward
				 the door)
			Tell us about it on the way to
			Pedro.

232	EXT. SAN PEDRO - 29TH STREET - DAY

	A steep hill overlooks part of the harbor. Escobar's
	unmarked car pulls up to a stop in front of a Spanish
	duplex perched on the steep hillside.

					ESCOBAR
			That's it?

					GITTES
			-- yeah.

					ESCOBAR
			Well, let's go.

					GITTES
			Do me a favor, will you, Lou?

190

	Escobar waits.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Let me bring her down myself...
			she's not armed or nothing... she
			won't be any problem... I'd just
			like a minute alone with her...
			It would mean something... to...
			her... and to me.

	Escobar shakes his head. For a moment it looks like it
	means no.

					ESCOBAR
			You never learn, do you,
			Gittes?

					GITTES
				(a little
				 
fa0
chagrined)
			I guess not.

					ESCOBAR
			-- Give you three minutes.

					GITTES
			Gee, thanks, Lou.

	Gittes gets out of the car, glances around, goes up the 
	stairs. He looks back down at Escobar. Gittes rings the 
	bell. He waits. It opens. It's a WOMAN who's not 
	recognizable. She's got the remnants of a black eye.

					WOMAN
			Yes?...

	Gittes looks past her to Curly, the fisherman from the
	first scene. He's seated at the dinner table with his
	father, his mother, and his children. Curly looks up in
	surprise.

					CURLY
				(happily)
			Mr. Gittes! Come in, come in.

233	Gittes enters and closes the door. Curly rises and comes
	over to him, greets him happily.

					CURLY
			Gee, this is a surprise, Mr. Gittes.

					GITTES
			Call me Jake. How is everything?

					CURLY
			Just sitting down to supper, Jake.
			Care to join us?

					GITTES
			No thanks --

					CURLY
			How about a glass of wine? Honey,
			this is --

					WIFE
				(coolly)
			Yes, I know.

					GITTES
			Thanks just the same, Curly. I
			could use a glass of water, though --
			come out with me to the kitchen
			for a second.

					CURLY
				(puzzled)
			Sure thing.

234	INT. KITCHEN - GITTES AND CURLY

					GITTES
			Curly, where's your car?

					CURLY
			In the garage.

					GITTES
			Where's that?

					CURLY
			Off the alley.

					GITTES
			Could you drive me somewhere?

					CURLY
			Sure, as soon as we eat --

					GITTES
			Right now, Curly. It can't wait.

					CURLY
			I'll just tell my wife.

					GITTES
				(pulling him out
				 the back door)
			-- tell her later.

	They head out the back door and down the steps toward
	The garage.

235	EXT. ALLEY AND GARAGE

	Curly pulls open the garage door. Gets in, starts the
	car, backs it out. It's an old, late twenties Plymouth
	sedan. Gittes hops in. They take off. At the edge of
	the alley Gittes looks back.

POV FROM CURLY'S CAR

	Escobar is getting out of his car, moving towards the
	duplex. Gittes slips down in the seat.

					GITTES' VOICE
	Just drive slow for a block or two,
	will you, Curly?

					CURLY'S VOICE
			What's this all about?

					GITTES' VOICE
			Tell you in a couple of blocks.

236	INT. SEDAN - GITTES AND CURLY

					GITTES
			How much do you owe me, Curly?

					CURLY
				(embarrassed)
			Oh, gee, Mr. Gittes -- we're going
			out tomorrow. I know you been real
			good about it but my cousin Auggie's
			sick.

					GITTES
			Forget it. How would you like to
			pay me off by taking a couple of
			passengers to Ensenada... you'd
			have to leave tonight.

					CURLY
			-- I don't know...

					GITTES
			-- I might be able to squeeze an
			extra seventy-five bucks out of it
			for you -- maybe an even hundred.

					CURLY
			-- plus what I owe you?

					GITTES
			I'll throw that in too.

					CURLY
				(smiling)
			Okay, you got yourself a boat.

237	EXT. MULWRAY HOME - GITTES AND CURLY

	carry bags out to Curly's car. Curly opens the door for
	the Maid. She gets in. He turns to Gittes.

					GITTES
			Tell Mrs. Mulwray to wait for half
			an hour after you get there -- then
			if I don't show, take her down to
			the boat.

					CURLY
				(a little worried)
			-- you sure this is okay?

					GITTES
				(mildly indignant)
			Curly, you know how long I been in
			business.

	Curly nods, reassured. He gets in and takes off.

238	EXT. MULWRAY HOME - DUSK

	by the pond, cigarette smoke drifts INTO SHOT. A car
	pulls up. In a moment Cross can be SEEN, looking TOWARD
	CAMERA.

					CROSS
			There you are.

	He walks toward Gittes who stands by the pond, smoking.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			Well, you don't look any the worse
			for wear, Mr. Gittes, I must say...
			where's the girl?...

					GITTES
			I've got her.

					CROSS
			Is she all right?

					GITTES
			She's fine.

					CROSS
			Where is she?

					GITTES
			With her mother.

	Cross' tone alters here.

				CROSS
			... with her mother?

	Gittes pulls something out of his pocket and unfolds it.

					GITTES
			
190
I'd like you to look at something,
			Mr. Cross --

					CROSS
				(taking it)
			What is it?

					GITTES
			An obituary column... can you read
			in this light?

					CROSS
			Yes... I think I can manage...

	Cross dips into his coat pocket and pulls out a pair of
	rimless glasses.. He puts them on, reads.

239 	GITTES

	stares at the bifocal lenses as Cross continues to look
	through the obitua
fa0
ry column. He looks up.

					CROSS
			What does this mean?

					GITTES
			-- that you killed Hollis Mulwray --

	Gittes is holding the bifocals with the broken lens now.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
		-- right here, in this pond. You
		drowned him... and you left these.

	Cross looks at the glasses.

					GITTES
			...the coroner's report showed
			Mulwray had salt water in his
			lungs.

					CROSS
				(finally)
			Hollie was always fond of tide-pools.
			You know what he used to say about
			them?

					GITTES
			Haven't the faintest idea.

					CROSS
			-- that's where life begins...
			marshes, sloughs, tide-pools... he
			was fascinated by them... you know
			when we first came out here .he
			figured that if you dumped water
			onto desert sand it would percolate
			down into the bedrock and stay
			there, instead of evaporating the
			way it does in most reservoirs.
			You'd lose only twenty percent
			instead of seventy or eighty. He
			made this city.

					GITTES
			-- and that's what you were going
			to do in the Valley?

240	EXT. POND - CROSS AND GITTES

					CROSS
				(after a long moment)
			-- no, Mr. Gittes. That's what 
			I am doing with the Valley. The 
			bond issue passes Tuesday - 
			there'll be ten million to build 
			an aqueduct and reservoir. I'm 
			doing it.

					GITTES
			There's going to be some irate
			citizens when they find out they're
			paying for water they're not getting.

					CROSS
			That's all taken care of. You see,
			Mr. Gittes. Either you bring the
			water to L.A. -- or you bring L.A.
			to the water.

					GITTES
			How do you do that?

					CROSS
			-- just incorporate the Valley into
			the city so the water goes to L.A.
			after all. It's very simple.

	Gittes nods.

					GITTES
				(then)
			How much are you worth?

					CROSS
				(shrugs, then)
			I have no idea. How much do you
			want?

					GITTES
			I want to know what you're worth --
			over ten million?

					CROSS
			Oh, my, yes.

			GITTES
			Then why are you doing it? How
			much better can you eat? What can
			you buy that you can't already
			afford?

					CROSS
				(a long moment,
				 then:)
			The future, Mr. Gittes -- the
			future. Now where's the girl?...
			I want the only daughter I have
			left... as you found out, Evelyn
			was lost to me a long time ago.

					GITTES
				(with sarcasm)
			Who do you blame for that? Her?

	Cross makes a funny little cock of his head.

					CROSS
			I don't blame myself. You see,
			Mr. Gittes, most people never
			have to face the fact that at
			the right time and right place,
			they're capable of anything. Take
			those glasses from him, will you,
			Claude?

	Mulvihill moves INTO VIEW. Extends his hand for the
	glasses. Gittes doesn't move.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			It's not worth it, Mr. Gittes.
			It's really not worth it.

	Gittes hands over the glasses.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			Take us to the girl. Either
			Evelyn allows me to see her, or
			I'm not averse to seeing Evelyn
			in jail -- if I have to buy the
			jail -- Hollis and Evelyn kept
			her from me for fifteen years --
			it's been too long, I'm too old.

241	EXT. CHINATOWN STREET - NIGHT

	The streets are crowded. Here and there one can see
	Chinese in traditional dress.

242	GITTES

	driving slowly -- spots Katherine with Ramon and luggage,
	nearly lost in the crowd. They are walking toward a car
	parked near a laundry truck.

	Gittes sees them, keeps driving.

					CROSS
				(suddenly)
			Stop the car. Stop the car!

	Mulvihill tries to clobber Gittes. Gittes elbows him.
	The car jumps the curb and hits a lamppost.

243	EXT. STREET - CROSS

	leaps out of the car shouting:

					CROSS
			Katherine! Katherine! Wait!

	Gittes is after him, grabbing him. Cross tries to swing
	at Gittes with his cane. Mulvihill comes up behind Gittes
	and the three of them begin an awkward wrestling match,
	--the crowd scattering, Mulvihill pulling his revolver, 
	trying to hit Gittes on the side of the h
190
ead. The three 
	men crash to the pavement.

244	CURLY

	starts out of the car toward Gittes. Gittes sees him.

					GITTES
			No, Curly, get 'em out of here!
			Get 'em out of here:

	He bites Mulvihill's hand and furiously pounds it into 
	the sidewalk, shaking gun loose. Mulvihill and Gittes
	Try for it but someone else has it.

245	EVELYN 

	Holds the gun. She's shaking but apparently in contr
fa0
ol
	of herself.

246	GITTES

	rises to his feet. Mulvihill starts to help Cross up.

					EVELYN
			No, don't help him. Don't do
			anything.

	Mulvihill doesn't move. Cross rises on his own. Evelyn
	holds the revolver on him.

					EVELYN
				(continuing)
			-- she's gone. It's no good.

					CROSS
			Where?

					GITTES
				(moving to Evelyn)
			Let me handle that.

					EVELYN
				(to Gittes)
			I'm all right.

					GITTES
				(she's not)
			Sure, but I'd like to handle it.

	Evelyn backs up as her father takes a step toward her.

					CROSS
			You're going to have to kill me,
			Evelyn. Either that or tell me
			where she is.

	Evelyn is backing up. Cross moving on her. Evelyn cocks
	the pistol.

					CROSS
				(continuing)
			How many years have I got?...
			she's mine too.

					EVELYN
			-- she's never going to know that.

	There's the SOUND of a SIREN. Cross lunges toward her.
	Gittes grabs Cross.

	Duffy and Walsh are elbowing through the crowd.
	Gittes sees them.

					GITTES
			Duffy -- go over and sit on Mulvihill.
				(to Walsh)
			Jesus Christ, I didn't tell you
			to bring the police department
			with you.

					WALSH
			Jake -- it's Chinatown. They're
			all over-the place. You oughta
			know better.

					GITTES
				(to Walsh, meaning
				 Cross)
			Gimme your keys. Watch this old
			fart, will you?
				(moving to Evelyn)
			Take Duffy's car. Curly's boat's
			in Pedro, near the Starkist
			cannery. It's the Evening Star.
			He'll be waiting. I'll take
			care of this.

	She looks to Gittes. He looks at her. She turns and
	He looks at her. She turns and Escobar is standing 
	between her Escobar is standing between her and it.

					ESCOBAR
			Mrs. Mulwray, you don't want to
			run around like that.

					GITTES
			Oh, Christ. Escobar, you don't
			know what's going on. Let her go.
			I'll explain it later.

					ESCOBAR.
			Mrs. Mulwray, it's a very serious
			offense -- pointing that at an
			officer of the law. It's a felony.

					GITTES
			Let her go. She didn't kill anybody.

					ESCOBAR
				(starting toward her)
			I'm sorry, Mrs. Mulwray --

					GITTES
			Lou, she will kill you -- let her
			go for now. You don't know.

					ESCOBAR
			Gittes, stay outta this.

	Escobar continues to move toward her. Gittes grabs him.

					GITTES
				(to Evelyn)
			Now take off.

	Evelyn gets in the car. She starts it. Gittes lets
	Escobar go.

					ESCOBAR
			I'll just have her followed --
			she's not going anywhere --

	There's a single GUNSHOT. Both men look surprised. Down
	the block a uniformed officer has fired, standing beside
	his double-parked car. Duffy's sedan slows to a stop in
	the middle of the street. It jerks a couple of times,
	still in gear, then comes to a halt.

	Gittes rushes to the car. He opens it. Evelyn falls out,
	inert. Blood is pouring from her right eye.

				GITTES
				(yelling)
			No!

	He holds onto Evelyn as Escobar and others hurry up.
	Cross himself elbows through.

					GITTES
				(continuing)
			Where is he? I'll kill him, I'll
			kill the son of a bitch --

	Several officers contain Gittes.

					GITTES
				(continuing;
				 to Escobar)
			Who is he, get his name? I'll kill
			him --

					ESCOBAR
				(badly shaken)
			Take it easy, take it easy, it was
			an accident --

					GITTES
			An accident --

	Gittes looks down. What he sees horrifies him. Cross is
	on the ground, holding Evelyn's body, crying.

					GITTES
			Get him away from her. He's
			responsible for everything. Get
			him away from her!

					ESCOBAR
				(stunned)
			Jake -- you're very disturbed.
			You're crazy. That's her father.

	Walsh and Duffy elbow through the crowd.

					ESCOBAR
				(continuing;
				 to them)
			You wanna do your partner the
			biggest favor of his life? Take
			him home. Just get him the hell
			out of here!

	Duffy bear hugs the protesting Gittes, along with Walsh,
	literally dragging him away from the scene, with Gittes
	trying to shake free. Through the crowd noises, Walsh can
	be 
d8
heard saying, "Forget it, Jake -- it's Chinatown."



THE END


Found on INFlow Screenplay Repository 0