ENTRAPMENT Screenplay by Ron Bass Story by Ron Bass and Michael Hertzberg Revisions by Don Macpherson 1/19/98 Revisions by William Broyles 2/22/98 EIGHTH DRAFT February 22, 1998 FADE IN: INT. NEW YORK BUILDING--LATE NIGHT Park Avenue. CREDITS START OVER long PAN UP sheer glass face of a New York Residential tower, up, up, to the very top where... ...a lone dark FIGURE emerges from a door onto surface of the wind-swept roof. Surrounding us, towers of glass and steel, stone and brick. Below, a drop of sixty stories. Hundreds of feet down, minimal traffic. We CLOSE to see... ...The THIEF. All in black, nearly invisible in shadow, with sleek visored helmet that conceals face. From a pack, takes climbing rope. Clamps it with carabiner around post. Dials a distance into the special ratchet mechanism. Thief steps to edge of building, LEAPS over... ...and FALLS down face of tower, glass windows reflecting New York. Whooaaaaa! We are falling with the Thief, a wild frightening ride with the rope trailing behind. Suddenly the rope gears down smoothly, stopping the Thief at a window pane. Through the glass, we see spotlights bathing paintings and sculptures. Swiftly, deftly, the Thief pulls out case of precision TOOLS, begins to DRILL OUT two of four BOLTS holding window in place. A glance at the city far below, and the Thief turns UPSIDE DOWN, lowering to drill out the last two bolts. The Thief replaces existing bolts with handcrafted CUSTOM BOLTS containing ROLLERS. The Thief now PRIES at corners of glass and POPS it free, ROLLING AWAY the pane on shafts of custom bolts, leaving just enough room for the Thief to slip into... INT. PARK AVENUE SUITE--LATE NIGHT ...See now FROM THIEF'S POV, helmet's visor is a NIGHT-VISION material that creates red-tinted light in darkness. Nearby, ALARM BOX softly BEEPS to pulsing of a green light. Thief points a REMOTE at the alarm. The Remote runs possible codes at speed on display panel, until the right one STOPS. The Thief clicks the Remote. OFF. Moving across to a VASE of lilies, perfectly situated on a lacquer chest before a gilt mirror, the Thief LIFTS the vase, brings it across the room to a small table by the window. TILTS stems, so that the lilies hang over lip of vase, away from the window. Now turns, SCANS... ...the profusion of priceless art. Paintings run to Otto Dix, Franz Marc, Marcel Duchamp. One statue of Rodin. Soft lighting makes walls invisible, everything with infinity perspective. An obsidian slab dining table seems to end at horizon... The THIEF goes past the bedroom, where a couple sleeps. The Husband has a mask over his eyes; the wife has fallen asleep with a book in her lap and the reading light on. The Thief takes out from the backpack... ...a large cylindrical TUBE bearing a label we cant' read. The Thief moves quickly through the spectacular apartment, past German expressionist oils, Russian futurists, a Rothko, a Kandinsky, a Frances Bacon. The Thief has no interest in these, as CREDITS CONTINUE, we enter... INT. PARK AVENUE SUITE, STUDY--LATE NIGHT ...a study. No windows. Book-lined. With elegant antique writing desk. Above the desk... ...a single PAINTING. Unlike the others, this one is small, a study in darks and lights, a nude woman reading a letter while her feet are being washed. The Thief wastes no time, unceremoniously takes out a special scalpel... ...CUTS painting from its frame with sure, perfect strokes. As THIEF rolls the canvas quickly in acid-free paper. Opens cylindrical tube, pulling out another CANVAS which we cannot see. Deftly unrolls this, fitting it carefully into stolen painting's now-empty frame. Re-hangs it. Stares through opaque helmet visor. Approves. Slips rolled-up stolen canvas into empty tube. Leaves. Before we follow the thief, we linger to see the replacement canvas... ELVIS. On black velvet. INT. PARK AVENUE SUITE, STUDY--LATE NIGHT WITH the Thief now, moving past panelled library to a CHUTE built into the wall, a brass lid with the words U.S. MAIL. The Thief opens the chute... HOLD on address. On last line '...HONG KONG'. And a small distinctive LOGO of a cartoon Chinese mask. The Thief pops labeled tube DOWN the chute. The Thief heads into the room where the open window waits. Thief disappears out the open window. The window closes, becoming... EXT. BUILDING WINDOW--NIGHT Another window, in which we see reflected the lens of a telescope and, in that lens, the image of the apartment where the thief has just been. A silhouetted FIGURE is looking through the telescope. EXT. NEW YORK BUILDING--LATE NIGHT VIEW through scope's lens. An amazingly CLOSE detail of the Penthouse where the thief had been. The Figure walks away. We see light fall into the room as the Figure exits a door and softly closes it as CREDITS CONCLUDE. The IMAGE stays the same, but the darkness lifts, the image lightens and DISSOLVES INTO: INT. PARK AVENUE SUITE--VIDEO--DAY The Park Avenue Suite on VIDEO, daytime, with COPS and INVESTIGATORS combing the crime scene. The wife being interviewed, the Owner in robe with coffee cup, lots of activity. Cops doing a typical investigation. FIRST TECHNICIAN (O.S.) Look at those assholes. INT. WEBBER ASSURANCE--MAIN OFFICE--DAY The video plays live on a large monitor in a richly paneled room trimmed in marble, classic architecture mated with the most high-tech gear available. This is the headquarters of an agency funded by insurance companies to track down major theft losses. We are at a bullpen in the center of the room, where four TECHNICIANS work at computer monitors. SECOND TECHNICIAN If the Rembrandt were lying on the table, they'd toss their donuts on it. Another MAN walks up behind them CRUZ They're doing their job... This last voice belongs to HECTOR CRUZ, early forties, focused, crisp, with the dead eyes of an ex-Company man who has seen it all. This is Cruz's place and this is his case. CRUZ (continuing) You better be doing yours. The Technicians snap to business. CRUZ (continuing) Schematics of security system. One Technician manipulates computer representations of the system on screen. FIRST TECHNICIAN We did a hundred simulations. No way anyone could have gotten in. CRUZ Too bad someone did. The other Technician starts scrolling faces on his screen. SECOND TECHNICIAN Our current all-star thief team. We're checking airline and immigration records against known aliases. Cruz turns to the Third Technician. CRUZ How much we in for? THIRD TECHNICIAN Twenty four million. Less reinsurance. Cruz's look: which is? THIRD TECHNICIAN (continuing) Twenty percent. This does not make Cruz happy. CRUZ Baker here yet? The Technician nods. TECHNICIAN She's been pulling all the feeds. Cruz walks away. INT. WEBBER ASSURANCE--GIN'S CUBICLE--DAY Cruz enters a separate glass partitioned office. VIRGINIA BAKER, early thirties, sits slouched at the work station where she spends most of her life. She hasn't taken any time getting ready: hair tied up on top of her head, workshirt over sweats, running shoes. This woman is all about work. On the walls of her cubicle are reproductions of works of art, with the date they were stolen and the date the case was solved. She's already tacked up a picture of the Rembrandt torn out of a magazine. CRUZ Where were you? I called at 4:30 this morning. GIN There are times when you don't answer the phone. She says it matter of fact, not even looking up, but the implication is obvious. CRUZ You didn't answer the beeper either. GIN I hardly knew the guy. Why be impolite to strangers? CRUZ I don't recall authorizing you to have a personal life. GIN I don't recall asking your permission. On the monitor above her station we can see the Park Avenue Suite on the same live feed we saw earlier. CRUZ A thief this good could handle the sensors in the rooms. What we don't get is how he effectuated his entry. GIN Through a window. CRUZ The windows don't open. GIN Entry through the doors or vents triggers instant alarm. They're fast, quick, testing each other. CRUZ The windows are wired, too. She works her computer. GIN They used smart glass. The sensors respond to violation of the panel's integrity. On her computer screen, a red-outlined rotating DIAGRAM of the living room. One window pane glows lavender. She touches a key, the window breaks. We hear a PIERCING SCREECH. Gin resets the program. The screech cuts off. CRUZ So he popped the pane? GIN Bingo. She touches the keyboard of her computer...This time the window SLIDES AWAY into thin air. No sound. CRUZ That's great if you're a computer. In the real world that pane weighs 200 pounds. The building's 600 feet high. GIN He unscrewed the bolts, reset them on rollers, then slid the whole frame away. No more effort than it takes to vacuum a floor. CRUZ Interesting theory. Where's the proof? She looks up at the live feed on the monitor and clicks the remote as she murmurs something in Chinese. CRUZ (continuing) You ordering chop suey again? GIN Let a thousand flowers bloom. Chairman Mao. Our camera ZOOMS toward the VASE of lilies by the window. All the flowers are tilted in one direction. Over the lip of the vase, away from the window. CRUZ Meaning-- GIN Meaning no one arranges calalilies like that. He left the window open when he came in. His only mistake. Cruz is with her now. CRUZ And the draft blew over the flowers. GIN Put the bolts on that window under a scope, I'm betting you'll find wrench scratches on them. Cruz takes a dollar out of his pocket. CRUZ Not bad. Have some coffee on me. He puts the dollar on her desk. Gin takes it. GIN Thanks, but Starbucks is a buck fifty. He digs for change. GIN (continuing) This particular guy is the best. The best there ever was. Cruz rolls his eyes. Oh no, here it comes. CRUZ You're not going to pitch MacDougal to me again. She stares at him. That's exactly what she's doing. CRUZ (continuing) He's been out of the business for years. No one's ever proved, hell, even arrested him, for anything. She hits the remote, changing the camera at the crime scene. The image of Elvis on black velvet in the Rembrandt frame appears. GIN Mac's signature. CRUZ Give me a break. Remember Manzini? When he stole Montezuma's scepter he left a Pepto Bismal bottle. The best ones always copy Mac. GIN You're saying the thief wants us to think it's Mac but it's really not. CRUZ Exactly. She CLICKS the remote, and another video monitor comes ON, running a grainy VIDEOTAPE of... GIN The auction. Where our client bought the painting... INT. BRITISH COUNTRY ESTATE--DAY We see the Great Room of an English country estate. Perhaps a hundred attend. GIN Ashcroft Hall, Buckinghamshire, four weeks ago. The tape PANS five PAINTINGS on the block. We recognize our REMBRANDT, the image of Bathsheba reading King David's letter as her attendants wash her feet. GIN (continuing) Bathsheba reading King David's letter... She hits a button. The view PULLS BACK to include the crowd, and FREEZES. One tiny section is circled. And BLOWS UP, so blurry as to be unrecognizable. Then, SNAPS to tight resolution. The image of... GIN (O.S.) (murmur) Anyone we know? ...ANDREW MACDOUGAL, 60, face etched with character and worldly experience, lit by a twinkle behind the razor-keen gaze. Tall, wide shoulders, the build of an ex-sailor and the elegance of a diplomat. INT. WEBBER ASSURANCE--GIN'S OFFICE--DAY They stare at the image. GIN He marked the buyer, then stole the painting a month later. Cruz doesn't want to agree too easily. CRUZ He goes to lots of auctions. He's got his own collection. But she's winning him over. GIN Copies are copies. I know a MacDougal when I see one. Cruz stares at her, comes to a decision. CRUZ I'll get in touch with London and Geneva, get Europol and the ALR on it. Cruz turns to go. GIN They've never caught him before, what makes you think they'll catch him now? CRUZ You got a better idea? GIN Yeah. Me. He takes her measure. She's serious. GIN (continuing) We've got to catch him in the act. CRUZ (tell me something I don't know) Why didn't I think of that? GIN It's not the thinking of it, it's the doing it. CRUZ With that computer--nobody better. Out there...it's different. You twisted your ankle stepping over a curb on Madison Avenue. But we can tell he's thinking it over. He wants her to do it, doesn't want to let her have it too easily. GIN I've been following this guy for years. I'm your best shot. CRUZ How would you approach him? Hello, Mr. MacDougal, I'm Gin, would you steal a painting with me? GIN I'd need an introduction. From someone he trusts. Someone who owes us a favor. Cruz is thinking. CRUZ That's doable. GIN And a target guaranteed to catch his interest. CRUZ Which you have in mind. Of course. GIN He's on his way to London, right now, for an auction of Chinese art, one of his passions. He stares at her, flat, blank, maybe saying good-bye. CRUZ Make sure you check in. EXT. AUCTION ROOM, LONDON--SUNSET--HELICOPTER SHOT London in all its glory. The Thames River and its bridges, the gothic wonders along the water, the Christopher Wren elegance of Saint Paul's, taking us to the auction house and down into the street. A double decker bus WIPES screen, revealing a pair of woman's legs which head up the steps of... EXT. TATE GALLERY--LONDON The Woman enters the doors. INT. AUCTION ROOM, LONDON--SUNSET One vast pillared ROOM. Marble with crystal chandeliers. TILT DOWN from painted ceiling to where an AUCTION is in progress. A female AUCTIONEER takes bids from an international big- money crowd. PAN along row of buyers, including a formidable Chinese WOMAN with a dog, swivel round to... ...ANDREW MACDOUGAL in classic Savile Row. He's bidding on a 6th century temple scroll, indicated only by subtle gestures with his program. Behind him, a woman steps into frame. WOMAN'S VOICE (from behind; subtitled Chinese) Don't do it...You're already over value. By fifteen per cent... MacDougal doesn't turn. Just raises his program, ups the bid. GIN (subtitled Chinese) Twenty per cent. You know what they say about a fool and his money... Mac turns very slowly. Sees Gin then. She's in a classic skirt and jacket, maybe with glasses, like an artist become an art dealer. His glance goes to his bidding RIVAL, a middle-aged Chinese woman who indicates bids with a Yorkshire Terrier, whom she holds in her hands. MacDougal raises back. MAC (leans back; subtitled Chinese) I have a question... GIN (subtitled Chinese) Who am I? MAC (subtitled Chinese) That is of no interest. And now he turns. Straight to her eyes. MAC (continuing; subtitled Chinese) Why are we speaking Chinese? GIN (English now) Uh. I'm showing off. MAC A billion people speak Chinese. Don't be too impressed with yourself. As for that scroll, I can resell it for double. In 30 minutes. GIN No you can't. MAC (oh?) I can't? GIN (really sorry) It's sold. Mac turns to see Madame Mao flushed with victory. He stares for a long moment, a philosophical veneer almost masking his anger. Then he stands up. MAC Are you a confederate of my adversaries? Or are you just stupid? HOLD on her. Gin's smile fades. Mac is gone. EXT. AUCTION ROOM--NIGHT Mac among the guests awaiting their cars, standing slightly. apart. From behind, a female throat clears. He closes his eyes for a beat. Then, turns. GIN (softly) How about if I try humility. MAC How about if you try disappearing. His glance lifts beyond her shoulder. And walks off toward a silver Ferrari just pulling up. She goes after him, desperate to keep his attention. GIN That's a Ferrari. Tipping the valet. Sliding in... MAC My God, you're observant. Shutting the door. Driving away, leaving her standing there. EXT. HOTEL TERRACE--LONDON--LATER THAT NIGHT A classic English hotel with a summer terrace. MAC (O.S.) ...only it's not bloody football! Mac is having some single malt Scotch with ROKI, a Japanese businessman in a typical Saruman suit. MAC It's just that crap Americans call 'football', like you could call your ass a blueberry scone and have it be one. Roki nods seriously. Mac pulls out a leather cigar holder, pulls out a cigar, gestures to Roki. MAC (continuing) Join me? Roki nods. Mac passes him the cigar holder. MAC (continuing) Why'd you want to bring that foolishness to Japan, you're just pissing your investment down a bungee hole. Flat against one side is an ENVELOPE, which Roki PALMS skillfully, slipping it seamlessly INTO his pocket as he withdraws a small MATCH BOX. He takes out one long cigar, lights up. ANOTHER ANGLE In the b.g. we see Gin enter. She sees Mac talking to Roki, takes a breath, walks toward them. MAC (continuing) Seriously, Roki, put your money into pharmaceuticals or prostitution, something stable. Roki pushes the cigar holder and match box back toward Mac. Opening the box, Max sees one match and a small MICROCHIP fastened to the cardboard. Lights up. Slides the match box in his pocket. MAC (continuing) Garbage, perhaps. Or industrial plastics. Mac takes a satisfying puff, gathers his things. He's ready to go. MAC (continuing) Wasn't there someone you wanted me to meet? ROKI Yes... Roki looks around just as Gin arrives at their table. GIN Mr. MacDougal. MAC You're like malaria. Once you get it, you can't get rid of it. ROKI This is-- She holds out her hand to Mac. GIN Virginia Baker. ROKI The associate--I was telling you about. MAC You're joking, surely. ROKI You know we have no sense of humor. MAC This woman's bad luck. ROKI For me, she's been very good luck. Now if you two will excuse me... He toasts Mac with the last of his drink, picks up his cigar, and strolls away. GIN I'm sorry about the scroll, but sometimes you have to lose to win. MAC Where did you hear that, one of those American talk shows? (to waiter) Check, please. GIN I don't want to waste your time. MAC Then don't. GIN I have a proposal for you. He signs the check, glances at her, then looks her over, heels to hair. MAC Believe me, if you weren't so tiresome, I'd have one for you. GIN Something of great value, something of such artistic and historic significance that only you could truly appreciate... Mac makes a quick decision. MAC You have a car? GIN Uh, yes. MAC Meet me in front. Five minutes. He gets up and without a word, leaves. EXT. HOTEL--NIGHT The parking attendant pulls up in a typical rental car while Gin waits. Mac emerges in full stride, heads for the driver's side. MAC Get in. As Mac gets in, he deftly palms a RAZOR BLADE and slices the right leg of his trousers. A little flustered, Gin slips into the passenger seat. GIN This is a rental. You're not authorized to drive it. Mac puts the car in gear. MAC Live dangerously. Mac drives away. INT. CAR--STREETS OF LONDON Mac driving in silence. Gin stealing glances at him. Suddenly and smoothly, he reaches down, and picks up... GIN That's my purse. He opens it. One eye on the road, he begins to rummage... MAC Just want to see who I'm with. Can't be too careful... She SNATCHES the bag away from him, he GRABS it back, the car SWERVES LEFT and CRASHES VIOLENTLY into a parked car. ALARMS go OFF, a cacophony of horrific NOISE. MAC (quietly) Oh, dear. EXT. KOMITSU--NIGHT Mac and Gin are OUT of the car. Gin notices Mac's torn trouser leg and beneath it, what looks like blood on his leg. GIN My god, you're hurt. Mac looks down at the blood beneath the torn pants. MAC Seems I am. GIN I'll call an ambulance. MAC It's nothing serious. I'll just run into that building. They'll have some sort of first aid kit. Bystanders appear, as do the owners of the parked car. He LIMPS off toward the nearest building, a block-square 30- story skyscraper bearing the name KOMITSU. A crowd starts to form around Gin... Mac pulls a VISITORS ID badge out of his coat and pins it to the pocket as he strides toward the bUilding. INT. TOILET STALL--NIGHT We are inside an empty toilet stall. The door BURSTS OPEN, and Mac enters EAST, locking the door, hitting the STOPWATCH on his wrist, which begins counting at ZERO. He pulls UP his trouser leg, revealing a bloody gash, and RIPS the entire wound OFF, the rubbery prosthetic wound DANGLES, dripping its phony blood. Mac pulls a butterfly bandage stained with bogus blood from a bag strapped inside his coat, presses it on his leg, then FLUSHES the prosthetic DOWN the hole. He pulls off the VISITOR badge clipped to his lapel, and from a Ziploc bag slides a small sheet of plastic, which he PRESSES to the face of the badge, fitting perfectly, turning the badge into... ...an EMPLOYEE I.D. Quickly, Mac takes out the MATCH BOX from the hotel bar, and with a fine tweezers gently removes the MICROCHIP Roki passed him. He places it INSIDE the badge, activating it with a soft BEEP-BEEP. Mac looks up at the ceiling, where he sees a large air conditioning vent. INT. PREP ROOM--NIGHT--MOMENTS LATER Dimly lit. Full blue and white clean suits with hoods and booties hang on racks all around the room. An ENGLISHMAN puts on a clean suit. INT. VENT ABOVE--SAME Inside a large air conditioning duct, Mac slides telescopic mirror through vent. In the mirror sees the Man walk over to heavy sliding air-locked door and push a large red plunger with the pair of his gloved hands. The doors to one of two CONTAMINATION ROOMS hiss open. Man enters. INT. PREP ROOM--NIGHT Mac drops down into the room. He moves swiftly to put on a clean suit. Two JAPANESE MEN enter before Mac has finished. They are talking in Japanese. Mac rips open tinted safety glasses, slips on rubber gloves and face mask, and then turns to the Japanese. One of them points to Mac and speaks in English in a rough, accusatory way. JAPANESE MAN What are you doing? MAC My job, honorable supervisor. The Japanese Man gestures, tuck in your mask. And in fact, Mac's mask isn't quite tucked in. Mac tucks in his mask. MAC (continuing) Domo arigato. JAPANESE MAN Quality is everyone's responsibility. MAC You are absolutely correct. Mac bows. The Japanese Man bows back. Mac turns to approach the red plunger as the Japanese Men mutter something derogatory in Japanese to themselves. He pushes the plunger. INT. DECONTAMINATION CHAMBER--NIGHT--SAME Mac enters a small square chamber. The door closes with the hiss of an air lock. A female recorded voice purrs safety instructions while Mac is bombarded by an air shower of green, yellow and white chemical spray and a pulsing wash of UV light. An OUTTAKE GRATE begins to suck the colored gas back out of the chamber. Mac removes the grate, follows the billowing gas into the vent, then replaces the grate from the other side. The chamber doors open. We see into the Laboratory. INT. LABORATORY--NIGHT--SAME Technicians in clean suits manipulate large etching machines while others scrutinize the resulting chip-lined silicon black wafers with microscopes. Once they are cleared, the wafers are returned to cassettes in a large clear plastic boat. A technician picks up the plastic boat and walks with it toward a conveyor belt, noticing as he goes that the decontamination chamber is empty. Odd. But there is work to do. He sets the large boat into its seat on the conveyor belt. The boat of wafers disappears through the wall. INT. CHIP PROCESSING ROOM--NIGHT--CONTINUOUS The boat emerges through the wall. The belt takes it through a series of baths where it is gently washed to hyper clean it. Above the belt the ceiling is crisscrossed with large ventilation ducts. Suddenly, from inside one of the ducts, a scalpel slices through the heavily reinforced vinyl. Mac emerges and slides through, dropping down beside the conveyor belt. He glances at watch. Colored gas begins leaking through the incision. Mac gently waves the cloud of gas toward... ...a row of sensors marked GAS DETECTION. Mac positions himself on the conveyor belt directly behind the large boat. The belt carries him through a vacuum lock into a room filled with red gas. DANGER ARGON GAS a sign reads. Mac THROWS back his hood, YANKS out his mini oxygen pouch, fits the slender forked breathing tube into his nostrils, and slips on thick round infrared GOGGLES. No time to lose... INT. CONVEYOR TUBE--NIGHT The conveyor TUBE, a horizontal Lexan cylinder three feet in diameter, filled with billowing red gas. Mac stretches out on his belly, glancing up to where the clear conveyor belt, with its cargo of microchips, runs along just above his bead in eerie red light. He begins to... ...shimmy, crawl, squirm along the length of the tube. Gas too thick to see the end. He is agile as a commando, hauling ass, faster, HARDER... INT. MICROCHIP VAULT--NIGHT A black chamber. We can scarcely make out the rows of shelving, the air purifying equipment, the conveyor belt entering through its air lock, as two FIGURES IN CLEAN SUITS stack the chips on shelves. INT. CHIP PROCESSING ROOM--NIGHT The gas streaming from the incision Mac made in the ventilation tube swirls around the sensors, which flash red and trigger ALARMS through the building. INT. MICROCHIP VAULT--NIGHT The ALARM sounds in the vault. The two men immediately evacuate, just as, through the gasket... ...Mac TUMBLES into view, swinging himself neatly DOWN to the floor, and in a single motion, he is already FLASHING a neon- green pen light along the shelves of microchips. He's looking for something special. Not this row. Not that one... ...he's found it. A single row, 35 chips, not black like the others but copper-colored. Mac whips out a coiled strip of shiny black SATIN CLOTH. Three feet long, little more than an inch wide. Carefully, Mac lays the strip down directly OVER the row of microchips. And when he lifts it UP again... ...the chips have ADHERED to the underside of the cloth. In one deft SNAP of his wrist, he COILS the cloth again, like a yo-yo. Turns to leave, and... Tosses a small SACK of something where the chips used to be. TIM'S CASCADE BRAND POTATO CHIPS. SEA SALT AND VINEGAR FLAVOR. EXT. MICROCHIP VAULT--NIGHT Mac exits out into a highly secure hall lined with NO ENTRY. SPECIAL CLEARANCE REQUIRED signs. But the narrow hall is now filling with a few employees in clean suits evacuating their stations. He quietly blends in. A man in a clean suit turns to him. MAN Second bloody time this week. I thought these Nips had their act together. Mac says something in Japanese that sounds exactly like what the Japanese men had said earlier. MAN (continuing) Sorry, Mate. Nothing personal. Mac shakes his head, walks on. EXT. KOMITSU--NIGHT Mac emerges in his white clean suit, quite near to where Gin is still dealing with the messy confusion of the traffic accident. She doesn't notice him. He walks past her, takes off his hood, and hails a taxi. INT. HOTEL CORRIDOR--LATER THAT NIGHT Gin comes down the hall, upset. Knocks on a door. INT. HOTEL--MAC'S ROOM--NIGHT Mac comes to the door, opens it for Gin. GIN You disappeared. MAC You seemed to be handling everything quite nicely. GIN Are you...okay? MAC It was only a scratch. Far more damaging to my trousers than to me. GIN That's good. Terrific. But she's still upset. MAC You're upset about your car. Leave the bill at the front desk and. I'll take care of it. Goodnight. He starts to close the door. She stops the door. GIN I don't care about the damned car. My luggage's been stolen. MAC You're joking. (beat) You can't trust anyone these days. He seems genuinely concerned. He opens the door. MAC (continuing) Come in. She enters, paces, upset. MAC (continuing) Have a drink. He drops some ice in a glass. MAC (continuing) Have you called security? Pours in some whiskey from the hotel decanter. GIN Yes. But they don't have a clue. (beat, takes a drink) Why would anyone steal my luggage? MAC Maybe the thief thought you had something valuable. You are in the business, that's what Roki says. GIN Like I would have art in my suitcase. MAC Of course you wouldn't. The Rembrandt wouldn't fit. GIN Excuse me? He's knocked her off balance. MAC Only the most famous painting stolen in years. If you don't keep up on your craft, you'll miss all the jokes. She looks at him for a moment, at the pirate's smile. Nervous, she tries to get down to business. GIN Speaking of our craft, I would like to talk to you about the...matter of business. He considers her with an unsettling, dissecting gaze. MAC You know, if you did a few simple things to your appearance, you could be reasonably attractive. He comes closer, smiling. She reaches into her bag. He's enjoying himself. GIN I've got something... MAC I sincerely hope so. He gently stops her hand from rummaging in her bag. He's enjoying himself. GIN You're not taking me seriously. MAC Oh, I'm taking you...quite seriously. He's close now, really close. He's definitely the kind of man your mother warned you against. GIN Well, uh... And in spite of herself she's flustered. GIN (continuing) I didn't expect you to be so... MAC So what? GIN So alive. This amuses him. MAC They still take me down from the wall every now and then. This is getting out of hand. She breaks the spell and heads for the door. GIN I have to go. Mac grabs his coat. MAC So do I. I'm checking out. Yet again his unpredictability throws her off balance. He may beat her out the door. She holds the door shut. MAC (continuing) Do you mind? GIN You...you can't. MAC Of course I can. I have a note from mother. She stands by the door and takes another drink, but her hand is shaking. The ice cubes rattle. MAC (continuing) You're shaking. Are you nervous? GIN No. Why would I be? MAC Because you young Americans think the world began when you were born. You fall apart when you don't get your own way. A look passes across her face. There's only one way she'll keep him here. Besides, he is pretty damn hard to resist. GIN I don't really like people my own age. She has turned to stare at him. No trembling now. And she most definitely hasn't fallen apart. MAC That's convenient. I'm old enough to be your grandfather. She smiles at him. GIN My father. Without taking her eyes off him, she leans back and starts to close the door. MAC Hmmm. That at least keeps it in the family. And the door closes in our face. INT. HOTEL--MAC'S ROOM--DAY--NEXT MORNING We hear the sound of the shower. Dressed in a bath robe, Gin is going through Mac's luggage. The shower turns off. She closes his luggage, rushes over, pours herself a cup of coffee. He emerges in a robe. She smiles at him and picks up her purse. GIN I've got something for you. MAC Oh, that's quite all right. No charge. She tries not to grin, she's serious now. She pulls an envelope out of her purse. GIN It's the job I was telling you about. His face clouds over. Not the job again. MAC And I thought we were getting on so well. GIN We were, we are, but this is perfect for you. MAC Not interested. He turns away from her and opens the closet. GIN But...but we-- A part of her thinks that sex sealed their deal. And the implication makes him brusque. MAC Are you under the impression that now I'm in some way obligated to you? GIN Well, no...but... MAC Good. I'll call the concierge. They can get you a new room, book your flight home, so forth. He begins putting on his pants. She chokes back a sob. He turns and sees her, sitting absolutely still, her eyes wet with frustration. MAC (continuing) For God's sake. GIN I'm sorry. This just means so much to me. She tries to wipe her eyes with her sleeve. MAC I'll give you one minute. She pulls a PHOTOGRAPH out of the envelope. It's a haunting GOLDEN MASK with diamonds for tears and rubies for lips. MAC (continuing) The Empress Death Mask. GIN The most important piece of Chinese art outside of China. He stares at it, so many thoughts, so many levels he connects to it. GIN (continuing) Somewhat better than that temple scroll you were bidding on. MAC That old pirate Chiang Kai Shek personally took this to Taiwan when he was run out of China in 1949. Peking would dearly love to have this back... GIN I suspected it might be worthy of your interest. MAC It's not for sale. But he can't take his eyes off it. GIN I know. MAC So you've heard all those stories about me. Well, I can assure you they're not true. And if they were true, I've retired. He tosses the photograph of the Mask aside. GIN But Roki said-- MAC Roki has a vivid imagination. MAC (continuing) Besides, if I lacked certain ethical scruples about the ownership of property--which I do not--I wouldn't need a partner, much less a callow girl. I'd do it myself. GIN You can't. MAC Oh? GIN It's only on exhibit at the Queen's Museum this month. Even if you could get into the museum, the Mask bas its own security system. A special, randomly programmed interval code. Mac stares at her. GIN (continuing) To which I have the key. She smiles sweetly, puts the envelope back in her purse, stands up. GIN (continuing) But you're not interested. She heads for the door. Mac thinks for a moment. MAC I need an hour. She smiles. The fish is hooked. GIN We going somewhere? MAC Possibly. GIN Maybe I should drive this time. MAC Maybe you should go buy yourself some clothes. And he points her out the door and closes it behind her. EXT. HOTEL--NIGHT Mac gets into his Ferrari. Gin is dressed in a tourist sweatshirt, pants and running shoes--the sort of clothes you'd find in a hotel gift shop. Mac takes in her clothes. MAC Very nice. GIN Not a word. EXT. LONDON--DAY--HOUR LATER They pull up to Borough Market, a glass and iron roofed Dickensian jumble of stalls, stores, warehouses, and all- night pubs. Trains rumble overhead. The streets are narrow and cobblestoned. Delivery trucks pull up with huge rounds of cheese, fish, vegetables, clothes, etc. We see mimes, jugglers, street artists, the feel of an urban fair. Gin can't believe what Mac has just told her. GIN You want me to pick up a painting? MAC Quite a good one. A Monet. Not major, but it is Giverney. GIN I'm not here to run errands. I'm here for the Mask. MAC If I can't trust you to pick up a painting, how can I trust you about the Mask? She stares at him. GIN It's a test. MAC That's my girl. She's all business now. GIN Fine. What do I do? MAC It's simple. You pick up the painting, you pay for it with this debit card. He hands her a debit card. GIN How much am I paying? MAC I'm paying...one point five million and change. I hate round numbers. He hands her a Star Tac phone. MAC (continuing) Stay in touch. EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--DAY Gin passes through the maze of people. Among them, we see an African braiding hair. A man chopping heads off fish. Businessmen in pin striped suits, carrying umbrellas and the Financial Times while they eat fish and chips. Everything looks innocent and ominous. As the African braiding hair reaches up to twist a braid, we see the muzzle of a bungee mounted beneath his robe/vest. Gin has the phone to her ear. MAC In front of you is a small warehouse. Go inside. Ask for Haas. She enters a small warehouse. INT. CHEESE FACTORY--DAY Tall glass windowed walls opening into the market. Everywhere are huge rounds of cheese, some in vats of milky water, others hung from ceilings. Not exactly the place you'd expect to find a Monet. Two MEN are at the counter in front. They gesture her to the back, up the stairs to a room overlooking the vats. INT. CHEESE FACTORY--DAY Gin enters the office where HAAS works over some figures. HAAS You got the card? GIN (trying to be cool) You got the merchandise? HAAS Merchandise? You mean the painting? He lifts up a wrapped painting from behind his desk. He holds out his hand for the card. GIN Unwrap it. He tears off the brown wrapping. It is a painting. It could be Monet. GIN (continuing) Okay...now bring me the real one. HAAS This is as real as it gets, lady. The phone rings. MAC Have you made the transaction? She turns away from Haas, whispers. GIN It's a fake. MAC Give him the card. GIN But-- MAC Can you follow simple directions? She gives Haas the card. He swipes it through a card reader. MAC (continuing) Pick up the painting. She picks it up. GIN I'm telling you it's a forgery. The paint's still wet for God's sake. MAC Look on the back. What do you see? On the back is a tiny black film case. GIN A film case. MAC That's what you're buying. Put it in your pocket. She does. Haas looks up from the reader. He's not happy. HAAS It's declined. What are you pulling on me? Gin swallows, nervous, holds up her hand--just a minute-- talks into the phone. GIN He says they turned the card down. MAC Damn, I knew I forgot something. GIN Not funny. It's not. It's very scary. Haas is not a man to fool around. GIN (continuing) What the hell do I do now? MAC Up to you. You could tell him the check is in the mail. He hangs up. GIN Mac--Mac! We hear a dial tone. She recovers, smiles at Haas. GIN (continuing) Run it again. There's obviously a mistake. Haas looks skeptical, but he swipes it again. HAAS There better be no mistake. His tone is hard and flat and menacing. Gin smiles as she studies the painting. GIN I'm so sorry to have doubted you. This painting is obviously genuine. Only Monet could do water lilies like this. See? He looks up from the machine just as she SMASHES the painting down on his head. Then she's down the stairs on the run. INT. CHEESE FACTORY--DAY Gin runs out as Haas emerges, yelling to the MEN to stop her. One of the men heads for Gin, the other talks into his wrist as if on a radiophone. Gin dodges through the cheese and... EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--DAY--CONTINUOUS Her way blocked to the right by BADGUY1, runs left toward Borough Market. EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--DAY Parked next to Borough Market cafe, Mac is reading the paper and listening to music. He looks up and sees Gin escape up the road away from him. He pulls out and turns left into Park Street and races away under railroad bridge. EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--DAY Gin runs into Stoney Street, then turns right as BADCAR1 blocks her. BADGUY2 and BADGUY3 leap out of car. Facing her now is BadGuy2, the African who was braiding hair. He has the SK, but she runs through the covered area of market. BadGuy2 follows her. BadGuy3 goes up alley into market to try to cut her off. Gin runs down one row of stalls and up another. It's a maze. She's lost. She turns into an alley. Confronted by BadGuy1 coming up the alley, she turns back but is blocked by BadGuy3!! Trapped! Gin dives through a market stall filled with poultry hanging on hooks and fruit, leaps onto pallettes and jumps over the fence, BadGuys1,2,3 in pursuit, struggling to follow her through the market crowds. BadGuy1 jumps the fence, yelling-to his cohorts. BADGUY1 Get the car! Cut her off! They head back for the car. Gin runs, desperate, with BadGuy1 right after her. Suddenly BADCAR2 screeches up. BADGUY4 jumps out of passenger side, joins chase! Gin runs past columns and into tunnel, but at the end is a grill gate. Locked. She rattles it just as Mac's Ferrari pulls up on the other side of the fence. BadGuy4 grabs Gin but with surprising presence of mind she stomps on his instep, then on his knee, knocking him down. MAC Back up the tunnel! Turn right! Mac roars away as Gin turns and runs back up tunnel. BadGuys2,3 pick her up as she exits the tunnel, chase her through the market toward Winchester Walk. EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--DAY Gin bursts through the gateway onto the road. Mac's Ferrari pulls up sharp, almost knocking her over. He opens the door. She jumps in, out of breath, furious. GIN What the hell was that? MAC Not bad. I didn't expect you to make it out. GIN You what--? BadGuy2 comes around the column. BLAM! Fires a shot which dings into the Ferrari door. Mac steps on the accelerator and guns the Ferrari up a narrow alley. MAC swivels wheel, turns left -- guns ahead, leaving pursuing GUYS behind, but BadCar2 blocks exit. Mac hits the brakes. Gin is thrown hard against the seat belt. MAC You get the film? Gear change, Reverse. She nods, then is thrown back against the seat. Mac powers his way through WINCHESTER SQUARE. BadCar1 screams toward them, screeches into a 360 and gives chase. MAC (continuing) It's the complete plans to the Queen's museum, security system, everything. She stares at him. BadGuys fire! Blam! Taking out Ferrari tail-lights. Mac races forward, confronted by a TRUCK pulling out of an alley. Mac slams on brakes! BadCar1 swerves to a stop, BadGuys leap out. Mac slams into reverse! MAC (continuing) Congratulations. His foot goes down. Wheels spin. Heads straight for wire cage, then -- Blam!! through wire, uprooting posts. Then -- MAC (continuing) I'm on board. Blam!! through second wire, out onto -- EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--STREETS--DAY People scatter as we REVERSE through market place toward concrete pillars. Mac screeches to a halt just before crashing into them. GIN Terrific. MAC changes gears, Ferrari screeches past flea market stalls as BadCars1 and 2 pursue. MAC So how'd you get in the business? Mac careens into WINCHESTER WALK, BadGuys are hot in pursuit. At junction of Winchester Walk and Stoney Street, Mac swerves under RAILROAD BRIDGE. BadCars slam into each other! Battered, BadCar 1 screams on. GIN My father-- Gin is thrown from side to side as Ferrari races on. Above, on railway line, TRAIN roars past, whole ground shakes. Over by TRUCK, CARS rev up. Tires burn. Hot pursuit, after... EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--STREETS--DAY Zooom! Down narrow street, just wide enough for single vehicle. Mac sees delivery truck being unloaded by FORKLIFT, dead ahead! GIN My father went to prison. Embezzlement. The Ferrari does a 225 degree spin and heads down street, BadCar1 right behind. The Ferrari races toward us, BadCar1 chasing fast behind. Like a chess game. Move and counter-move. As... Veering round a corner, Mac races with BadCar 1 racing right behind. MAC smiles. MAC So you learned at Daddy's knee. MAC's hands on wheel. Light touch. Hand on gear. Feet on pedals. Hand to eye--that gleam. Of instant reactions, fueled by an adrenaline buzz, as... EXT. BOROUGH MARKET--NARROW STREETS--DAY Mac and Gin's Ferrari zig-zagging down street, mounting curb-- GIN I learned not to get caught. MAC screeches faster past PRISON MUSEUM. By ANCHOR PUB, we see Mac race toward us with BadCar1 behind. Mac goes around corner, seeing SOUTHWARK BRIDGE in b.g. EXT. LONDON BRIDGE--TRANSITION Mac roars across London Bridge still pursued by BadCar1. EXT. LONDON STREETS--DAY Mac steers Ferrari out onto wider open roads, where, he can finally zoom ahead. BadCar1 still pursuing, but falling back, driver talking on radio. A MOTORCYCLE suddenly appears out of a narrow alley! GIN Motorcycle. MAC Got it. Mac heads left onto FREEWAY RAMP, has to slow. BadCar 1 pulls alongside. BadGuy inside readying Gun. Mac accelerates. Blam! The Ferrari rear window shatters! EXT. FREEWAY--DAY Rear window out, the Ferrari is chased down the freeway, the Motorcycle weaving/in and out right behind! GIN That's why I came to you. Mac checks mirror, foot down. MOTORCYCLE tries to close gap. EXT. ROAD--DAY ...Just as a CAR cuts sideways across in front of Mac, at last possible instant Mac swerves and descends down into APPROACH TUNNEL. GIN You always get away. EXT. /TIMER--APPROACH ROADS--DAY The Ferrari catches up to traffic going into tunnel. BADVAN pulls up alongside Mac. The doors slide back, revealing BADGUYS with guns! Mac jerks the Ferrari hard right, across the divider, enters TUNNEL AGAINST TRAFFIC! GIN It's one way. MAC We're only going one way. BadVan misses cutoff, roars harmlessly into tunnel. But the Motorcycle leaps into the lane after Mac, guns it, screams up right on his tail! MAC (continuing) Some people just can't take a hint. Inside tunnel, one long blind concrete corner. Orange lights glare down. At max speed, Mac and Gin's Ferrari zooms down, meets a BUS coming toward him in left lane! Mac swerves to the right, narrowly missing bus! But then a huge semi TRUCK, filling the tunnel, hurtles straight toward them, the driver pumping the HORN. The monster TRUCK fills the screen. The tunnel's walls suddenly seem so tight, so small. GIN We're going to die, aren't we... MAC I'm not the one to ask... Huge truck wheels, giant gleaming chrome bumpers, coming right at them. No room, nowhere. They zoom towards certain death. Grimly determined, Mac SLAMS foot to floor. GIN Not a good idea. As they get CLOSER. And CLOSER. Huge truck, all iron and steel; tiny Ferrari, flimsy aluminum and plastic. Just as they are about to hit, MAC spins wheel, Ferrari veers to left, MOUNTS some stairs along the tunnel WALL, just as TRUCK accelerates forward, and... GIN (continuing) Shiiiiitttt!! PUSHES CAR UP ONTO ITS SIDE...PINNING CAR BETWEEN TRUCK AND WALL...FERRARI HAS TO SCRAPE THROUGH... Screeeccchhh!! Ferrari's sleek body BUCKLES and SCRAPES past as TRUCK presses up. Both truck and car slow down, until as the TRUCK pushes past in a storm of noise and sparks -- Woomph!! Mac's Ferrari DROPS, WHAMS onto SIDE, and... Screeeeechhh!!! Skitters along on its side, the road flashing past Gin's window. MAC turns wheel, and...Whamm! Ferrari flips over, wheels tilt, car THUMPS onto ground, wheels GRIP tarmac. Up ahead, the end of tunnel... OPENS UP before them. And...Swoooosssh! Out other side. A few yards later. Stunned, grateful to be alive, GIN looks over. Deadpan. GIN (continuing) Why the rush? Mac doesn't skip a beat. Straight back. MAC We have a plane to catch. Oh. Yeah. That explains it. GIN What about your bags? MAC I never carry...baggage. As...ZOOM Ferrari disappears round corners, into the labyrinth of city streets. EXT. HELIPORT--DAY The Ferrari pulls up to a private heliport. A state of the art Helicopter waits on the tarmac. Mac gets out, pops the tiny trunk. There's a bag inside. MAC Speaking of baggage, you'll find some clothes in here. Gin opens the zipper, pulls out some clothes in astonishment. GIN Those are my clothes. MAC Certainly not mine. Come on. He picks up the bag and steers her toward the waiting chopper. GIN You stole my luggage? You-- MAC I'm a thief. Sue me. GIN Where's my bag? He stops at the steps of the helicopter. MAC When you were dealing with the wreck of your rental car...I did a little job. Thirty five prototype copper microchips, value, one million each. He waves to a mechanic who is checking out the rotors. MAC (continuing) Your bag is in Hotel Security, with ten of those chips inside. An anonymous phone call, your rental car at the crime scene, it's not a pretty picture. Gin can't believe this. GIN That's entrapment. MAC No. Entrapment is what cops do to robbers. His flat hard eyes. MAC (continuing) And blackmail is What robbers to do schmucks. He heads her up the steps of the chopper. He sits in the pilot's seat. She sits down beside him, a stunned look on her face. GIN I don't believe this. MAC What's your problem? I'm doing the job. GIN What's my problem? You want a list? MAC You really don't believe I'd take on a partner after all these years without a little...insurance? He doesn't linger on the word at all, but she hears it. The Mechanic is signaling to Mac outside the cockpit. Everything's okay. GIN Where are you taking me? Mac picks up the headphones. MAC I hope you're not one of those women who have to know every little detail. Fasten that seat belt. He puts on the headphones, shutting her out. He presses a button. There's a jet-like sound. The rotors start gently to turn. GIN I hope you don't fly like you drive. The rotors turn faster. Mac lifts the helicopter up, and it flies away. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--NIGHT A helicopter light searches in the darkness, picking out the deer running across a heath and then the walls of a large house, the reflection of a pool, and finally, a large green lawn. The helicopter settles down on the lawn. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--FRONT DOOR--NIGHT Mac and Gin walk up to the front door. We see the helicopter in the b.g. He carries the bag from the trunk. She's looking around with a professional eye. MAC Lose something? GIN I'm just curious what sort of security system you'd have in your own house. MAC And-- GIN I'm impressed. Can't spot a thing. MAC Hmmm. I'd be surprised if you could. He turns the knob and walks in. No, key, no code, no nothing. INT. SAFEHOUSE--ENTRY HALL--NIGHT She follows him in disbelief into an entry hall. GIN Nothing? You don't even lock the door? MAC I guess I have a more optimistic view of human nature than you do. He leads her down the hall. GIN Meaning, no one would dare rob you. INT. SAFEHOUSE--LIVING ROOM--NIGHT They walk through a comfortably furnished living room decorated with restraint and taste. On the walls are only a few classic paintings. A Turner. A regimental banner from a Scottish regiment. Every item reveals a piece of Mac's life and who he is. Mac is purposeful, Gin lingering, looking at everything. MAC Let's keep moving, shall we? INT. SAFEHOUSE--GIN'S ROOM--NIGHT--MOMENTS LATER He sets her bag down on the bed in a guest room decorated with neutral colors and lined with bookcases bulging with old books, all of which look read. MAC Good night. He turns to go. GIN Wait... She comes closer to him. MAC Yes? He's all business. GIN Why are we in separate--you know, separate rooms? MAC My job, my rules. We've got a job to do. No mixing business and pleasure. She thinks about that. GIN Too bad. Good casual sex is so hard to find these days. He looks at her for a moment. Straight into her eyes. MAC No, what's hard to find is someone you truly want to be with. Even for a while. An admission he probably shouldn't have made. Which he covers with... MAC (continuing) Breakfast at six. We've got a lot to do. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--POOL--EARLY MORNING Mac is swimming laps in the gray early morning light. Gin appears, dressed comfortably, no-nonsense. She watches Mac swim for a moment as she takes in the grounds: the English garden, the hedges, the green lawn stretching down to the sea. A tall windmill by the ocean. Mac sees her and gets out. He throws on a towel robe. MAC You're late. GIN I'm dressed. She pointedly looks at his robe. GIN (continuing) And good morning. MAC Good morning. GIN Nice spot. MAC It is. (beat) Coffee and fruitloops or whatever you eat in the kitchen. We'll start in twenty minutes. He heads away. She enters the house. INT. SAFEHOUSE--KITCHEN--DAY She finds a pot of coffee already brewed. Cups, milk, sugar all set out. Croissants. Scones. Boxes of American cereal. She opens the refrigerator. It's full. Everything neatly arranged. No sign of anyone else. She pours herself a cup of coffee. INT. SAFEHOUSE--LIVING ROOM--DAY Coffee cup in hand, she snoops in the living room. Staring at some old photographs. Studying the paintings. ANOTHER ANGLE Mac enters quietly, watches her for a moment as she picks up a book, looking for an inscription, any clue to who this man is. MAC Had your coffee? Embarrassed, she puts down the book. INT. SAFEHOUSE-PLANNING ROOM--DAY--MOMENTS LATER Long tables, specially designed hooks and bins for gear, large bulletin boards to tack things to, a couple of computers, various monitors and bits of electronic equipment. Mac pulls out a folder of photographs and plans and begins putting them up on the wall. MAC The Museum. An immense English country house set in beautiful gardens. He tacks up close up photographs. MAC (continuing) I know it well. GIN As I recall, you've robbed it before. MAC Years ago, if memory serves. When does the exhibit end? GIN In a week. This is not good news. MAC Only a week? GIN They're having a farewell party the last night. Before the Mask goes back to Taiwan. MAC That's when we'll do it. And we'll need every single day. He points to the battlements. MAC (continuing) I went in and out over the wall. He thinks for a moment. MAC (continuing) Which means they would have covered that by now. So...the tunnel. He points to a photo of a lake spanned by a bridge leading to the museum. MAC (continuing) When this was built Cromwell's roundheads had a nasty penchant for storming castles, drawing and quartering the cavaliers, so forth. It's not a pleasant thought. MAC (continuing) So the Duke dug a tunnel--just in case. They made the lake a hundred years later. Flooded the tunnel. GIN We go underwater? She doesn't like that idea. MAC We? Are you implying that I'm taking you inside? GIN We're doing this together. We're partners. MAC Precisely. You give me the Mask security code, I steal the Mask, you get a finders fee. At ten percent, should be two or three million at least. Not too bad. This isn't at all what she wanted. GIN Look, the PIR grid is set at 20 centimeters. I'll have to be the one to get under it. He's interested she knows the lingo, but not interested enough. MAC I go in alone. GIN You don't get the Mask code unless I go. He stands up, starts taking the photos down. MAC Pack up. I'll see you get back to London. GIN Look, I can help. You need a sensor expert. You've got one. MAC (he's patronizing her) This isn't some Picasso print you steal out of a car dealer's rec room. His patronizing tone is more than she can stand. GIN Picasso print? Car dealer's rec room? She has to pullout her trump card. And it's quite a card. GIN (continuing) You don't have any idea how lucky you are! MAC A lifelong problem, I'm afraid. GIN No, dammit! I mean me! That Rembrandt...that Rembrandt! He looks up at her. She has his attention now. GIN (continuing) I stole it! It's an amazing claim. We're not sure we believe her, and neither is he. MAC Nice try. Everyone thinks I did. GIN That's because I wanted them to! MAC I wondered who'd been giving me a bad name. GIN I drilled the bolts and went in through the window. It was the only way to bypass the smart glass. MAC True enough. GIN You need a partner for this job. You'll never find one as good as me. Mac is thinking, maybe coming around. MAC The Rembrandt--that was quite good. GIN It was perfect. Pride goeth before a fall. He stares at her for a moment with a half smile on his face. MAC Perfect was it? (beat) Would you excuse me? He goes over to the corner and picks up a familiar looking mailing tube, from which he takes a rolled-up canvas. MAC (continuing) Would you be referring to this Rembrandt? He displays the familiar painting. MAC (continuing) Dear Bathsheba. You know the story, of course. She and David have just betrayed her husband. She's wondering, will David betray her? Now it's her turn to be shocked. Badly. She can't believe it. MAC (continuing) You barely beat me to it. But really, why rob the Penthouse when the mailroom is on the ground floor? He's enjoying himself, but Gin is on her own agenda, trying to figure out the implications of the Rembrandt not getting to its destination. GIN Someone was expecting that. MAC You're too easily impressed with yourself. I believe I've made that point before. We're adjusting to the fact she stole the painting, she's adjusting to the fact it didn't get where it was supposed to. GIN This is bad. Really bad. She's thinking about something entirely different, mentally adjusting her plans. MAC The Elvis was a nice touch, not as good as Manzini's Pepto Bismal bottle, but nice. She reaches for the Rembrandt. GIN I'll need that. MAC No one needs anything except food and shelter. The rest we just want. GIN This isn't a good time to hear your personal philosophy. He studies the Rembrandt. MAC Don't worry, I can get rid of this. No trace. And I'll even go fifty fifty, we're partners aren't we? GIN No. It's a down payment. That piques his interest. MAC On what? Another job? GIN We get the Mask I'll tell you. MAC A partner with secrets isn't much of a partner. GIN Without the Mask it doesn't matter. MAC So the Mask is part of the down payment too. Must be a really big job. GIN Let's just see how we do. There's been a shift in the plate tectonics here. For the first time she's the one who's caught him off-balance. MAC So you're testing me now? GIN Oh, I think you can do it. Probably. She smiles sweetly at him. EXT. SAFEHOUSE-POOL-DAY She's swimming underwater--down to one end and back. He's checking a stop watch. She comes up right by him, gasping. He immediately shoves her head under water and holds it there as she struggles. The watch hits zero. He lets her up. MAC That's how much longer you'll have to go, to get through the tunnel. She chokes, spews water. GIN Why don't we take oxygen? MAC We are...for the tools. He tosses her a towel. MAC (continuing) You want to breathe or you want the Mask? She stares at him. GIN Let's do it again. MAC Try laps. Say a hundred. He leaves her swimming in the pool. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY--MINUTES LATER A delivery van drives up. A TRADESMAN steps out. He's mid- forties, black. Mac meets him at the door. TRADESMAN Delivery for Andrew MacDougal, Esquire. He says it with perfect deference, perhaps even a bit too much. MAC Take it around the back would you? EXT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY--MOMENTS LATER The truck drives around back. Carrying a box, the Tradesman walks into the kitchen. This is THIBADEAUX, a Cajun who carries himself with authority. The Tradesman veneer didn't fit him too well: he's too dangerous. Mac is there to meet him. THIBADEAUX I'm not real big on collecting banged up Ferraris at airports. MAC Next time I'll use valet parking. Thibadeaux sets down the box. MAC (continuing) I'm sorry about Tina. There's a lot of concealed emotion there. MAC (continuing) I would have come-- And the emotion is best handled by sticking to business. THIBADEAUX You said small pneumatics, I got small pneumatics. Got to be an elf to use these. Mac opens the box, picks up some flat black miniature tools, handles them with expert ease. THIBADEAUX (continuing) They work off the O2 tank just like the slice pack. MAC Which is-- THIBADEAUX In the van. MAC Tina was a wonderful woman. THIBADEAUX Don't go getting sentimental. You're no damn good at it. Thibadeaux walks out. Mac goes through the first box, checking the high tech gear off against a list. Thibadeaux comes in with another box. MAC I'd give you a hand but it wouldn't look good. THIBADEAUX Yeah, the lord of the manor doesn't haul his own groceries. MAC And you do it so well. We see the tools as he checks them off. They look very cool. MAC (continuing) The porta power...comm kits...got the IR/Thermo camera? THIBADEAUX Had to get a liquid plasma screen. MAC The key to success is using the right tools. THIBADEAUX You're not the one trying to get all this shit. You think they've just got a Crooks R Us on every corner? MAC We're going to need a vacuum with a battery pack for the dust. The air filters might be wired. And a bypass hose for the AC. THIBADEAUX Sure wouldn't want you to be uncomfortable. MAC If we don't bypass it, the temperature in the Mask room will change and set off the alarm. That would be inconvenient. THIBADEAUX Inconvenient is trying to find a pulsing laser with magic arms in two days. MAC You are a miracle worker. Thibadeaux looks up at him, steel in those eyes. He walks over to the window. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--POOL--HIS VIEW Gin swimming laps in the pool. MAC Don't worry. She's got thirty laps to go. Which means she'll do forty. He says it with grudging respect. THIBADEAUX So when do we do the dirty? The implications of that are not pleasant. MAC We might not want to cash in our chips just yet. She has another job after this one. A big one. THIBADEAUX This is big enough. MAC It's never big enough. There's a rough undercurrent here. It's not entirely clear where the power lies, although it seems it's with Mac. THIBADEAUX Let me ask you, this Mask, when they made it--was the old bitch dead or alive? MAC It's a death mask. Death mask means dead. Thibadeaux makes a face. THIBADEAUX You call that art. I call it sick. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--POOL--HIS VIEW Gin gets out of the pool, sips some water, shakes the water out of her ears. Caught unaware, without even trying she looks incredibly beautiful. INT. SAFEHOUSE--KITCHEN--SAME Thibadeaux is watching her. An idea, call it a suspicion, comes to him. THIBADEAUX You're keeping this business, right? Mac gives nothing away. MAC Right. THIBADEAUX Because I never assume anything. MAC I need you to get one more thing for me. A dress, elegant but sexy, something Grace Kelly would wear. Maybe a Balenciaga. THIBADEAUX That's it, I sure as hell ain't no personal shopper. MAC Black of course. They exchange a look. MAC (continuing) I'd say she's a size 6 who wears a size 4. THIBADEAUX This better be worth 1t. Mac looks out to where Gin is swimming. MAC Oh, it is. THIBADEAUX It better be worth it for me. And there is no humor in his eyes. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY Thibadeaux's delivery van drives away. INT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY--FEW MINUTES LATER Gin is in the living room, her hair still wet from swimming. She is staring at the Turner and the casually arranged mementos of his military service, the way a woman considers how a place is decorated to be a window into the owner's soul. Mac enters from the kitchen, carrying one of the boxes of gear. GIN Did I hear a car? MAC Our equipment has arrived. GIN Hmmm. He heads across the living room with the box. Her eyes go around the room. MAC You coming, or are you casing the joint? She comes to a realization. GIN A woman did this. He stops with the box, sets it down on a table. GIN (continuing) All this, this is a woman's version of what you would like. MAC It was a long time ago. She waits for him to tell her more, but that's not going to happen. GIN Who was she? He picks the box back up. MAC I should get this place redone. It's his way of telling her to buzz off. GIN I didn't mean to get personal. MAC Yes you did. There are deep spaces here, vast Greenlands of buried emotion. MAC (continuing) Unless physical labor is beneath you, there are more boxes in the kitchen. He picks up the box, exits. She watches him go, then heads into the kitchen. PRACTICE MONTAGE EXT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY Gin and Mac are blowin' up balloons without taking a breath. His balloon gradually deflates, hers keeps enlarging. She cuts her eyes over to him as she keeps blowing. Then she takes her balloon, squeezes it between her fingers, lets out a few little squeaks, and then lets it go, sending it flying around the room. EXT. BEACH/GROUNDS--DAY A maze of red yarn indicating the laser beams. Attached to the yarn. are small bells, the kind that go on cat collars. Gin is trying to navigate her way through it, but it's possibly hard. She keeps touching the yarn and jingling the bells. INT. SAFEHOUSE--PLANNING ROOM--NIGHT They practice hand signals together. It is like two deaf mutes communicating. Back and forth they go, signaling a problem and a solution, a way to go, the need for a tool. They are getting more and more in synch. EXT. SAFEHOUSE--NIGHT Gin is blindfolded, practicing finding the tools in the dark as Mac calls out the names. She can't see Mac watch her, but we can, and knowing she can't see him lets him reveal how fascinated he is with her. EXT. BEACH--DAY The maze of red yarn and bells strung across the sand. Gin works her way through it, not touching anything as Mac times her with a stop watch. We don't hear a single jingle. INT. SAFEHOUSE--PLANNING ROOM--DAY They're packing up all the gear. Tools into ziploc bags, ziploc bags into black diving bags. Everything carefully arranged. The walls are bare. They both have check~lists. MAC So how long to pop the floor? GIN Twenty four seconds--as long as it takes the clock to strike twelve. MAC And you've checked the ram to be sure it's synchronized with the clock. GIN A dozen times. MAC The lipstick thermal camera? She displays a small device on a headband. GIN Got it. MAC Charged? GIN Charged. Receiver? Mac displays a ziploc hag. MAC And tested. Mask security card. She holds up a card like an ATM card. She sets aside the check list. GIN That's it. We're ready. MAC One more item--not on the check list. He produces a box. He gestures at her. Open it. Puzzled, she does. There's a beautiful black dress inside. MAC (continuing) I trust it's your size. GIN It's---beautiful. She holds it up to herself. GIN (continuing) You bought this for me? MAC Don't get any ideas. Of course it comes out of your share. But there's more there than that, a lot more. GIN I don't know what to say. He offers her an option. MAC Thank you. GIN Thank you. There's a held moment between them. GIN (continuing) I haven't got anything for you. He waves his hand--hardly necessary. GIN (continuing) No, no, I want to. I'll just go into the village. MAC It's not a village. There's nothing there. Mac looks pointedly at his watch. GIN Won't take any time. MAC Straight down the drive, right at the hedgerow, follow the lane. Don't blink, you'll miss it. She puts the box under her arm, gives him a high wattage smile, and departs on his face is the slightest trace of suspicion. EXT. COUNTRYSIDE--DAY Gin rides a classic English estate bicycle down an isolated country lane. There isn't a sign of habitation or humanity anywhere. EXT. VILLAGE--DAY A small pub. A tiny post office and store. A phone call box. That's it. Gin leans the bicycle against the phone box. INT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY Mac works a monitoring device. It is picking, up random phone calls. We hear bits and pieces of conversations. EXT. VILLAGE--DAY Gin dials a number. VOICE Webber Insurance. INT. MAC'S ROOM--DAY We hear him listening to the phone call. GIN Hector Cruz on a secure line. INT. MAC'S ROOM--DAY And we see his face as he listens. VOICE Connecting. The line goes as dead as Mac's face. He thinks for a moment, then dials his own phone. INT. WEBBER INSURANCE/EXT. VILLAGE--DAY--INTERCUT Gin is talking to Cruz. CRUZ You don't call, you don't write. GIN This was my first excuse to get away. I can't exactly use my cell phone. CRUZ Yeah yeah yeah. What's the status? GIN We're getting close. CRUZ How close? GIN I don't know, but close. CRUZ This is dangerous. I'm sending backup. GIN You, want to blow the whole thing, go right ahead. CRUZ Don't overestimate yourself. GIN Look, trust me. I know what I'm doing. CRUZ Where are you at least? GIN I'll send you a postcard. Got to go. She hangs up the phone. EXT. COUNTRYSIDE--DAY Gin on her bicycle, face intense, rushing to get back. Suddenly she realizes she's forgotten something. She passes a bed of wild roses in the heath. Ah ha. She rides the bicycle off the road. Lays it on the grass. Looks through the tangle of thorns. Picks one rose. INT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY Gin's door opens. She emerges in the new dress. We've never seen her like this. She looks amazingly beautiful. INT. SAFEHOUSE--DAY Mac stands up as she enters, tentative, not sure. And then his look tells her everything. GIN You like it? It's a Pygmalian moment. If he hadn't overheard the first part of that phone call he might be falling in love with her. MAC Certainly the most beautiful crook I've ever seen. GIN I've got something for you. And she produces the rose, which she then pins to the lapel of his tuxedo. She's close to him. very close. We can feel the energy between them. GIN (continuing) Aren't we early? MAC Little celebration before we set off. INT. WINDMILL--DAY Mac takes Gin up steep stairs. He's carrying a box. EXT. WINDMILL--DAY The emerge on top. They look out over the ocean. It's not a place to be if you are truly afraid of heights. Gin goes a little pale. Mac opens the box. Inside is an ice bucket with a bottle of champagne. She's truly touched. As he turns to open the champagne she looks out. He pours them each a glass. GIN To us. To the Mask. MAC To our...partnership. They drink. Her hand is shaking again. MAC (continuing) You're nervous again. GIN When I was a girl my father took me to the edge of El Capitan. Three thousand feet of granite. Straight down. I was so scared my mouth was full of cotton. I couldn't talk, just stood there shivering...like this. MAC You were afraid of heights? GIN Terrified. Still am. MAC How in the devil did you do the Rembrandt then? GIN I had a lifeline. If I've got a lifeline, I'm okay. MAC Aren't we all. GIN My father told me not to be afraid. He'd always be there for me. She looks down at the rocks beneath. Shivers. GIN (continuing) He wasn't. MAC So you had to be your own lifeline. GIN Something like that. He thinks for a moment. MAC When I was a toddler, my father set me up on the dresser. Jump he said. It was a hard stone floor, looked about a mile down. About as far as this. She pulls back from the edge. MAC (continuing) Come on jump. I'll catch you. He held out his arms, so I held my breath and I jumped. She's right with him. GIN And-- MAC He pulled back his arms and blam, I landed right on the floor. I picked myself up, tears in my eyes, and he looked at me and he said, Son, don't ever trust anybody. Anybody. She stares at him. He drops the champagne glass over the side. Down, down, down it goes, so far we don't hear it shatter on the rocks. It's a long way down. We can't gauge what he's going to do. will he confront her? Is she in danger? MAC (continuing) Anything else we need to talk about? She stares at him for a moment, but his face is a mask. MAC (continuing) one more thing you'll need. He hands her an elegant black mask. MAC (continuing) For the Mask, they're having a masked ball. Everyone pretends to be someone else. She takes the mask, shivers. GIN I'm cold. She heads down the stairs. EXT. MUSEUM--DAY We swoop in on the museum in all its manorial magnificence. Guests arrive over the bridge. We see the lake with swans, a tent over the entrance, great festivities. EXT. MUSEUM--DAY Closer now. Guests getting out of cars. Everyone is in masks. Gin and Mac sweep in with the rest of the crowd as attendants check names against a guest list. INT. MUSEUM--DAY A great hall. Musicians in the balcony. He and Gin stroll in and pause at the entrance. In front of them, in the next room, the doors open and we see the Mask, beautifully and simply displayed in a glass box. They pause and look at it for a beat, then stroll to the right down the corridor. INT. MUSEUM--CORRIDOR--SAME Bookshelves, paintings, odd exhibits. MAC Camera in the-- GIN Bookshelf. Sensors-- MAC Popup, on floorboards. And-- GIN In eye of that painting. A WAITER approaches with a tray of champagne. He's dressed as a footman. WAITER Champagne? MAC Not for me. GIN Yes, please. She takes a glass. the Waiter moves on. MAC We're working. GIN It's a party. MAC Let's mingle a little, shall we? She nods and walks one way, he walks another. INT. MUSEUM--ANOTHER CORRIDOR--DAY Mac stares at some tin soldiers displayed next to some large stuffed fish. Thibadeaux is dressed in 18th Century clothes, tights, pumps, powdered wig, powdered face. He's not happy. Mac tries not to be amused. MAC I said a masked ball, not a costume party. THIBADEAUX How the hell I'm supposed to know the damn difference? MAC You look like George Washington. THIBADEAUX I cannot tell you a goddamned lie. She's selling you a pig in a poke. We better do this tonight. MAC It's too soon. THIBADEAUX The early bird gets the damn worm. MAC But the second mouse gets the cheese. He lets that sit there. MAC (continuing) So patience, Thibeau, patience. Trust me. THIBADEAUX Remind me why. MAC Because it pays off. Thibadeaux thinks about that. There's a crafty intelligence behind his eyes. THIBADEAUX You two make quite a couple. MAC We're supposed to. THIBADEAUX You better not be taking on a new partner. MAC Suspicious, after all these years? THIBADEAUX You change partners, you change the rules. Gin strolls up behind Thibadeaux. Mac switches gears. MAC Could you get me a gin and tonic, please, actually, a mint julep would be nice. Thibadeaux looks at him like he's lost his mind. MAC (continuing) Oh, look at me, darling. I thought this gentleman was a waiter. THIBADEAUX You damn well thought wrong. MAC I'm terribly sorry old man. Thibadeaux strides away. GIN (re: Thibadeaux) Interesting choice of dress. The music changes to something very danceable. MAC It's an arty crowd. Dance? INT. MUSEUM--GREAT HALL--DAY They swirl out onto the floor, Gin floating in Mac's arms. She moves like a dream. Her eyes never leave his face. Anyone looking would believe they were completely in love. GIN One, two, three... MAC You're not on the beat. She smiles as if making small talk. GIN Don't turn. I'm counting the steps to the entrance. MAC These rooms are solid stone. They haven't changed. GIN You can't be too careful. MAC Yes, you can. (beat) You can spoil a perfectly nice dance. And he swirls her away. We pull back from the dancers until all we see is the two of them and then light and motion and then the light and motion DISSOLVES TO blackness and... EXT. MUSEUM LAKE--NIGHT CRANE DOWN from bridge as car exiting the now-quiet museum crosses to reveal a SMALL BLACk ZODIAC with two black clad figures--Mac and Gin, dressed in black wet suits. Mac has a black diving bag over one shoulder and an oxygen bottle over the other. Gin has the slice pack and a black diving bag. They both have lights mounted on head bands. MAC Ready? GIN Ready. Mac pulls on his face mask and slides over backwards into the black water. Gin puts her face mask on, follows behind him. EXT. MUSEUM LAKE--UNDER WATER We see Mac swimming through the murky water. Once he gets under the bridge he switches on his head lamp. Up ahead, in the murky light, we see a window covered with rusted bars. Mac pulls out his slice pack and gestures with his hand to Gin. Gin gives him a rod, which he attaches to the slice pack. He turns on the valve, pulls the trigger, the bar ignites in a white light. He begins to burn the bar. We are on Gin's face behind the mask. She's trying to hold her breath. One bar goes, then another. Mac is concentrating, but the bars aren't burning as fast as they should. Gin signals with her hands that she's in trouble. We're close on the bars, the white light, the murky water. Mac very intense. Finally he burns through the third bar. With a kick he pushes the bars aside. Gin is about to lose it. He waves her through. She squeezes through the bars. He comes next, but it's a tight squeeze for him. He struggles, but... stuck! Up ahead we see Gin's light dimly receding. Mac's low on air. He pushes with all his strength. He's through! Desperately close to running out of air, Gin reaches some flooded steps. She scrambles up using her hands and feet. INT. BRIDGE BASEMENT--SAME--NIGHT She bursts through the surface, gasping. One breath, another. Then she looks around. No Mac. GIN Mac. Mac! She's far more anxious than she would ever have expected to be. Then she sees his light coming up the submerged steps. He bursts out beside her, half-drowned, spouting water. For a moment they lie there, gasping. GIN (continuing) I thought you were-- Mac looks at his watch. MAC Let's go. There's no time to waste. Mac stows the slice pack, they turn off their head lamps and head up the tunnel. INT. MUSEUM--TUNNEL--NIGHT The two of them making their way up the tunnel, lights out. The only light comes from the museum's exterior floodlights which shine dimly down a manhole up ahead. They pass one manhole, then another, then another. INT. MUSEUM--TUNNEL--NIGHT They reach the fourth manhole and climb up the existing metal ladder. INT. MUSEUM--TUNNEL--NIGHT The manhole cover lifts. Mac throws his black bag up, then comes up himself. Gin tosses her black bag up, then comes up after him. Mac opens his ops vest and pulls out his schematic, which is in a watertight bag. He switches on a tiny penlight on his head band and reads the map. He looks up and spots the AC return duct and points Gin down the long corridor. INT. MUSEUM--BASEMENT--NIGHT They come to a junction. Mac starts to take out his map but Gin knows the way. She points left. For a moment he hesitates, really wants to check the map, but he trusts her and goes left. INT. MUSEUM--BASEMENT--NIGHT They reach a junction of three ducts. Mac looks around the basement room, which is filled with an old furnace. Off to one side is a coal bin, to the other a firewood bin. Gin begins taking the tools out of their ziplock bags and laying them on a waterproof sheet of plastic as if she is preparing for surgery. He drags over a log used to split firewood, then stands on it, checking the bolts on the duct. MAC Nut driver, number six. Pneumatic. Gin attaches a nut driver to the air tool, passes it up. MAC (continuing) Ready. She turns on the regulator. With the faintest pop pop pop the nuts come undone. He takes the duct cover and hands it to Gin. Gin sets it down and hands Mac the flexible hose and plate which he attaches as a bypass for the a.c. Then he studies the ceiling where he has opened the duct. MAC (continuing) Concrete. It's always concrete. Gin passes him the concrete-burning rod and the slice pack. GIN Hold for the vacuum. She attaches the vacuum. Mac pulls on his mask and gloves. MAC Oh-two. Gin turns on the oxygen, Mac pulls the trigger and begins to cut through the stone with the flame. GIN Six minutes. Melting stone pours out into the vacuum. CLOSE ON CONCRETE Mac has removed a large area, through which we can see the bottom of a square of marble. MAC (O.S.) I've got the marble. INT. MUSEUM-BASEMENT-NIGHT Mac hands down the cutting rod. Gin passes him a ram. Mac places the ram with its right angle wedged into the concrete and its rubber top pressed against the marble. The hose attached to the ram drops down. Gin attaches it to the O2 tank. MAC Give me a little. She turns it on gently so the ram tightens in place. MAC (continuing) The other one. She passes up the second ram. INT. MUSEUM--MASK ROOM--NIGHT The Mask sits in its case, dimly lit. We see the gently pulsing lights of the security system. All the doors are closed. We find the clock. It is almost midnight. INT. MUSEUM--BASEMENT--NIGHT Gin turns on the other tank. She looks at her watch. Mac watches her. INT. MUSEUM--MASK ROOM--NIGHT The clock reaches midnight. The first chime strikes. As it does we see a piece of marble vibrate and the grout around it crack. INT. MUSEUM-BASEMENT--NIGHT Gin holds her watch, hand on O2 tank. She turns it again. We see the ram pound into the marble just as the clock chimes again. From down here we hear a dull thud beneath the chime. INT. MUSEUM CORRIDOR--SAME The debris from the party hasn't been cleaned up. A GUARD comes slowly down the hall with his dog. Every few feet he stops to sample a glass of leftover champagne. INT. MUSEUM--MASK ROOM--NIGHT The marble is about three inches off the floor and delicately balanced on the rams. Through the space we can just get a glimpse of Mac. INT. MUSEUM--BASEMENT--NIGHT Mac has his hands on the marble. MAC Rollers. She hands him black pipes which she is assembling as she hands them up. He places them under the marble. MAC (continuing) Gently, very gently. Working the O2 tank, she lowers the marble onto the rollers. Mac holds it carefully to be sure it's balanced, then rolls it away. The basement is bathed in the gentle dim light of the Mask room. Mac starts to step down. Gin attaches her head band which contains a lipstick CCD thermal camera and transmitter. She slips the felt-lined water proof bag that will hold the Mask over her shoulder, then steps up onto the log and reaches her hands up into the hole, getting a grip on the marble floor. Mac gives her a boost. Just barely can she wriggle through. INT. MUSEUM-MASK ROOM/MUSEUM BASEMENT--INTERCUT Gin lies motionless on the floor. Mac has an LCD monitor which shows him the grid of PIR of the motion sensors. We see what he sees. INT. MASK ROOM/INT. BASEMENT--CLOSE ON LCD MONITOR The room in negative, with a maze of laser beams crisscrossing. It looks almost exactly like the maze of red yarn on the beach, but not quite. We see Gin just beneath the maze. There's no margin for error. MAC You're at the edge of the ground. Don't move. Look left. She does barely lifting her head. Each movement of her head re-directs the lipstick camera on her headband. MAC (continuing) Look right. She does. The image on his screen changes. MAC (continuing) Straight ahead. Up. She barely moves her head, points it at a painting above the door. MAC (continuing) Got it. He passes up the tripod with three laser lights. She carefully sets up the tripod and mounts the first light. GIN Contact. Mac turns on the laser. We see a red beam stream out directly, into the PIR sensor. MAC Can you see the other PIRs? GIN Got it. She does the same thing with the second laser. Now we have two beams going out to each doorway. INT. MUSEUM CORRIDOR--SAME The guard has made his way closer to the Mask room. He wobbles a little. Then he stops and bends down and feeds the dog some leftover cake. Then he offers the dog some champagne. INT. MUSEUM BASEMENT--SAME We are on Mac now, watching his monitor. GIN Can't find the last one. She scans with her head. GIN (continuing) They moved it. MAC Behind you. She has to turn 180 degrees without disturbing any of the existing beams or the one she hasn't found. GIN Got it. She knocks out the last PIR. Now we have three beams, slightly but significantly different than what she practiced. MAC I know it's different. You can do it. She doesn't say anything. All we hear is her breathing. MAC (continuing) Be careful not to break the laser beams. GIN Duh. That makes her mad enough to get going. She slowly slides across the floor. After a moment she begins to maneuver under and around the beams. It's like the hardest limbo stick in the world. Finally she makes it to the Mask. A few random lights are playing around the Mask. She takes out a special CARD and slips it into a reader. The lights go out. GIN (continuing) Thank you God. She lifts the cover off. MAC Careful, it's weight sensitive. She knows that. She carefully lifts the Mask, sliding a knife under it as she lifts. She slowly glides the Mask over to the edge of its pedestal while holding the knife down. Then she takes a strip of double adhesive attached to a metal strip, pulls the adhesive back with one hand. MAC (continuing) Careful...careful. GIN Shut up. She slides the strip in where the knife was. Then she takes a breath. Mac does too. MAC You're forgetting something. She picks up the Mask, slips it into the bag around her neck. INT. MUSEUM--CORRIDOR/INT. MUSEUM--SECURITY CENTER--NIGHT The Guard is approaching the Mask Room. Somewhat drunk, his dog sits down. The Guard talks to CONTROL, the night dispatcher, who is definitely more together than Nigel. GUARD This is Nigel. CONTROL Still awake, mate? GUARD Just barely. I'm at the Mask Room. Shut down the alarm for a walk through. He waits outside the door. GUARD (continuing) They left a right proper mess out here. CONTROL Okay now, alarm down, you're clear. Stay lively. The Guard walks in. He shines his light around the room, right over where the marble floor piece had been opened. It's back in place. He scans the walls. All of a sudden his light hits the Mask case. There's a mask there, but it's Gin's party mask. The real mask is gone. EXT. MUSEUM LAKE--NIGHT Mac comes up into the boat, slips off his Mask. Gin comes up, gasping, thrilled. GIN We did it. MAC The Mask. She undoes it from around her neck, slings it up to him. She reaches up her hand, expecting him to help her in. He doesn't. He stares at her, dark, baleful. MAC (continuing) Now's when you tell me who you really are. GIN What? He shoves her head under the dark murky water, then pulls her by the hair. She comes up gasping. In the b.g. we see lights pop up in the first drain. An alarm goes off in the Museum. MAC I'll refresh your memory. You're a cop. You work for Hector Cruz at Webber Insurance. She treads water, tries to talk through her sputtering and choking. GIN The insurance job--it was cover. I knew all the security. That's how I got the security for this. He thinks about that. Makes sense. He nods. MAC You're playing both sides of the street. You're going to keep the Mask and turn me in. GIN No, no, please God, you're wrong. I'm a thief. Just like you. Mac thinks for a moment. MAC Okay, you're a thief. GIN Yes. Yes. MAC What do I need a thief for? I've got the Mask. He shoves her under again, then pulls her up, she's terrified now. GIN STOP! You're making...mistake. MAC It's your mistake. GIN The big job. MAC There is no big job. He starts to shove her under again. This is very scary. GIN A billion! He thinks for a minute, suddenly his hard look relaxes. MAC What? GIN A billion dollars. He stares at her in disbelief. GIN (continuing) Your share. MAC Get the hell in. He pulls her unceremoniously into the boat. She lies gasping on the floor like a fish, rolls over and faces the night sky. The lights pop up in the last drain. GIN You keep a girl on her toes. He paddles the boat out of frame. The lights pop up in the last frame, reflecting on the dark lake, which DISSOLVES TO: EXT. HONG KONG HARBOR--DAY A view like none other in the world. Mountains plunging into the sea. Thickets of modern buildings literally cantilevered over the water. The harbor crowded with every sort of vessel: cruise liners, British warships, tankers and freighters, yachts, sailboats, junks. We pick out a warship flying the Union Jack. EXT. FERRY--DAY--WARSHIP ON TV And we see it on a large TV screen in the rear of a ferry going across Hong Kong harbor. Mac is on his cell phone and watching the TV screen. CUT TO CNN Anchor: ANCHOR The royal yacht Britannia as it arrived today, bringing into Hong Kong His Royal Highness Charles, Prince of Wales-- We see a shot of Prince Charles disembarking, waving to the crowds and to the assembled Chinese and British officials-- ANCHOR (continuing) As he arrives at Government House to preside over the handover of Hong Kong-- On screen see scenes of British Hong Kong, Tracy Pullen--the last governor, British children, troops in full regalia. ANCHOR (continuing) --the Pearl of the Orient and the crown jewel in the British Empire-- Now on screen see Tung Chee Hua the new Chinese leader and other Chinese scenes. ANCHOR (continuing) --to the Peoples Republic of China after 156 years of British rule. We see the stock exchange, the banks, the images of a rich vibrant economy. ANCHOR (continuing) In less than two days the greatest island of capitalism will become part of the greatest Communist empire. We see preparations for a huge party. Television screens mounted on sides of buildings, rehearsals of orchestras and dancers. Huge long dragons with lights being erected in the streets. ANCHOR (continuing) It's going to be one heck of a party. And in the harbor we see fireworks barges being towed into position. One of the barges passes the big FERRY bound for Kowloon. We stay with the ferry. EXT. FERRY--HONG KONG HARBOR--DAY On the rear of the ferry Mac hangs up his cell phone as Gin emerges through the crowds, carrying two paper plates of noodles and some chop sticks. Mac stares at Hong Kong receding from them. MAC Two days until the end of the British empire. He thinks about that. MAC (continuing) We're living history here. GIN You don't know the half of it. She is staring off the stern at a beautiful MODERN BUILDING-- the Peoples China Bank building--on the water's edge in Hong Kong. It's all glass with dramatic wings extending out over a huge atrium. MAC You like modern architecture? He clearly doesn't. Gin eats, her eye on the skyline. GIN I like banks. (beat) That's where the money is. MAC Speaking of money. You said billions. How many? She keeps staring at the modern building. GIN Eight. That registers. MAC Eight billion? She smiles sweetly and takes his plate. GIN We're here. There's a shift going on here. We're on Gin's turf now. It's her turn to keep Mac off balance. EXT. KOWLOON--DAY The Ferry docks. We see Gin and Mac stream off with hundreds of other people. EXT. KOWLOON STREETS--DAY Seedy section of a crowded district. Open air markets, unmarked warehouses, tiny alleys. Gin and Mac approach in a typical rent car which can barely fit between the ramshackle walls. Gin parks in the alley, gets out, flips down a rusted metal cover on a moldy brick wall, revealing a control panel into which she pushes a code. MAC Nice. The doorman off duty? An Elevator opens. MAC (continuing) If you want a partner, I think you should recalculate the split. GIN Okay, 80-20-- INT. ELEVATOR--DAY They enter, Gin turns the control handle, the elevator creakily rises. MAC No, really, it's your plan, you should get at least 30 per cent-- GIN My eighty, your twenty, smart guy-- MAC It's fifty-fifty, less the cost of the dress. Gin stares at the ceiling, impatiently waiting. MAC (continuing) Come on, what can you do with six billion you can't do with four? GIN Hold the record. Alone. The elevator clanks to a stop. MAC Ah, what the hell, I'll throw in the dress and a dollar, call it a deal. The door opens, revealing... INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY A huge loft, hardwood floors stretching to windows offering a dead on view of the Hong Kong skyline across the Harbor. Nothing on the walls. Not a single personal item anywhere. MAC It's...homey. Gin goes to a line of closets along. one wall. She unpacks the Mask, pulls back a row of men's clothes. MAC (continuing) Finally, a personal detail. Boyfriend? He keeps it light, but he's surprised. GIN No. I don't carry...baggage. The echo with his line is deliberate. MAC Smart girl. He pulls out some black NIGHT OPERATIONS CLOTHES. He fingers the clothes as she dials in the combination to a safe. We see a tuxedo shirt and a TUXEDO. MAC (continuing) Hmmm...44 long. GIN I always knew you'd do the job. She puts the Mask into the safe, then closes it back up. MAC You've got everything planned. GIN Everything. This is a different Gin now. She's focused, competent, utterly in control. GIN (continuing) I'll need the Rembrandt now. MAC Sure, it's only worth 25 million or so, don't bother telling me what you're going to do with it. GIN I told you. It's the down payment. And thanks to you it's overdue. He hands her the mailing tube. Reluctantly. MAC Insidious thing, wondering if your partner...has another partner. GIN Okay, look, I'm delivering this to a man who's going to give us the key to our job. But it's pointless to try to explain it yet. You just have to trust me. I don't have any more secrets. MAC Everyone has secrets, it's what makes us human. She hands him a computer print-out. GIN A gear list. You could start checking it against what you'll find in those cabinets. She indicates some cabinets against the wall. MAC Idle hands, the devil's workshop. GIN There's food in the fridge. I won't be long. She leaves. EXT. HONG KONG HARBOR--JUNK--DAY Gin arrives by boat to a classic Chinese junk, the headquarters of QUI, head of a vast business and criminal clan. INT. JUNK--DAY A YOUNG MAN escorts Gin into Qui's office. It's warm and quite comfortable. Gin offers Qui the Rembrandt. QUI You're delivering it personally. I'm touched. He unrolls it. GIN Can't trust the mail these days. He admires the painting. QUI A true master. Classic, yet extremely sexual, don't you think? GIN We need to make the trade tomorrow. QUI Always in a rush. GIN You should know, when I come back here with the Mask--if anything goes wrong, a detailed description of everything you've done goes to the PRC. QUI Gin, really. GIN Tomorrow. It has to be tomorrow. Or forget the Mask. EXT. DAI PAI DONG, WANCHAI--DAY Vendor stalls hawking food, appliances, clothes. A zoo. Along one alley we see locals gobbling their meals. EXT. STREET MARKET, WANCHAI--DAY At a narrow table we find Mac, chopsticks in hand, mouth full, a bowling bag beside him. On his plate is a whole fish. Beside him is...Thibadeaux, eating a different dish with a fork and not much liking it. Thibadeaux looks at the bowling bag. THIBADEAUX Tonight your league night? MAC Check out my ball. He slides the bag over to Thibadeaux, who lifts out the Mask. THIBADEAUX Doesn't look like much. How come those Commos want it so bad? MAC It's not just art, it's history. Something you Americans don't care about--because you haven't got any. THIBADEAUX That's because we live in the future. Which is what's on my mind. Every now and then Thibadeaux zones in with laser directness. He is absolutely no fool. Mac puts the Mask back in the bag. MAC This is just show and tell. THIBADEAUX I'm waiting for the tell part. MAC She's calling the shots now. THIBADEAUX You're impressed with her, aren't you? MAC She's good. Give her that. Almost as good as she thinks she is. THIBADEAUX She reminds you of yourself. There's nobody you admire more. Mac shrugs, not wanting to get into this, but Thibadeaux is relentless. THIBADEAUX (continuing) My antenna is up, it is fully extended, and I am picking up...what is it? It is, can it be? The boy is in el, u, v. MAC It's never happened before. What makes you think it's happening now? THIBADEAUX You better be keeping your mind on business. It's not just me you got to worry about. I've got some very unpleasant folks looking over my shoulder. MAC You know where my loyalties lie. THIBADEAUX To yourself, that's where. Mac turns his fish over, peels back the skin with his chopsticks. MAC You'll just have to have faith. THIBADEAUX Faith is angels dancing on the head of a pin. I got to have trust. MAC She won't tell me everything. It's a bank job, that's all I know. Mac picks an eye out of the fish with his chopsticks. Eats it with relish. THIBADEAUX You know how that fish felt, he was just swimming along thinking everything was going his way, might as well eat something, then all of a sudden there's this tug on the line. And he's hooked. That's how I'm feeling now. As Thibadeaux talks Mac reaches into his coat and pulls out a rolled up piece of felt and hands it to Thibadeaux. Thibadeaux unrolls it, revealing the first of many golden chips. MAC Thirty-five next generation microchips. Copper, not silicon. Value: one million each. THIBADEAUX You're giving them to me? MAC Call it an expression of trust. THIBADEAUX Thought you had to use some of these. MAC You don't really think I'd leave ten million dollars worth of our chips in her bag? (beat) What matters isn't what's real. It's what we think is real--what matters is the art. He pats the bowling bag. MAC (continuing) Take this mask. It may look like the Empress, but it's not. THIBADEAUX I figured that out. MAC The face decays, the mask doesn't. Art lasts, we don't. That's why art's so valuable. It's a little piece of immortality. THIBADEAUX You got a real problem with priorities, you know that? MAC I really don't think that's a topic on which you have much to offer. THIBADEAUX Did I ever tell you what Tina wrote? The night she died? Mac shakes his head. This is getting on to different ground. THIBADEAUX (continuing) She couldn't say much, it was like she already had one foot on the other shore... He pauses, thinks if he can say this. THIBADEAUX (continuing) But she said, I'm leaving now, but my love isn't. He looks Mac straight in the face. THIBADEAUX (continuing) That's what really lasts. Not some painting or some bullshit mask. The clown, as usual, is the true wise man. MAC My friend, you always surprise me. THIBADEAUX We wear so many goddam masks after a while they get stuck to our faces, you know? And they don't come off. But when you find the one person who really knows you, and then you lose her... He doesn't say more. They both think about this. He gets up, picks up the bowling bag. THIBADEAUX (continuing) You care so much about this-- He hefts it. Mac starts to say something, but Thibadeaux cuts him off. THIBADEAUX (continuing) Your art...it's just another thing. People don't last, that's why they matter. Every damn dayTina and I had-- We had together, Tina and me. That's what he means but can't say. THIBADEAUX (continuing) --I wouldn't trade one day for every painting in the whole damn world. INT. GIN'S PLACE--MAGIC HOUR Gin returns, flush with plans. The place has that empty feel. GIN Mac? No Mac. She paces for a moment, doesn't want to think what she's thinking, can't avoid it. She walks to the safe. Throws back the clothes. She dials in the combination...gets it wrong. GIN (continuing) Come on...come on... Dials it in again. Click. She opens the safe. EMPTY. She can't believe it. She dials his cell phone number. MAC (message voice) This is Andrew MacDougal, you can leave a message but I probably won't call back. She slumps to the floor, stunned. This is as bad is it gets. INT. GIN'S PLACE--NIGHT The place is clark. The only light comes from the Hong Kong skyline. We can feel Gin's presence in the darkness. Hear the freight elevator. He enters. MAC (Ralph Cramden) Hi, honey, I'm home. He flips on a light. Gin sits on the floor, her face red and flushed. MAC (continuing) Really, you shouldn't have waited up. She comes toward him, so upset, so on edge, she can barely talk. GIN The Mask. Where is it? MAC You took the Rembrandt, I figured it was a fair trade. She erupts in rage. She runs at him in fury. He barely catches her. GIN I trusted you! I never trusted anyone!! He holds her tight, trying to subdue her. GIN (continuing) Do you know what you've done!? Do you know? MAC Would you quiet down! Just for a minute? She catches her breath. Mac reaches back into the elevator. Brings out the bowling bag. She looks at it, her feelings turning from relief to anger to relief again. GIN Oh my god, I thought-- MAC I'd taken the Mask? But the truth is more complicated and more powerful. And her words come soft and honest and true. GIN I thought you'd gone. She comes to him, holds him tight. All the pent-up energy between them suddenly flows out of her. And out of him. They embrace. They kiss hungrily, then tear apart. MAC What about the rules? GIN My job, my rules. He nods. Okay. GIN (continuing) And the rules are-- She comes closer, back into his arms. GIN (continuing) --there are no rules. They embrace and kiss and try to walk toward the bed elevated in the corner, but don't make it. They roll against the wall, Mac against her, then she against Mac. Past the windows, clothes shedding. And to the bed...finally... Together. EXT. HONG KONG--PEOPLES CHINA BANK--EARLY MORNING We are outside the modern bank with wings in rush hour. A Mercedes is trying to enter a private driveway. But a sea-food delivery van blocks the way. The driver honks. The delivery van driver waves him off. The driver gets out of the Mercedes. So does a bodyguard. Two youths appear on a motorcycle. One of them is the Young Man we saw at Qui's. They yell slogans and immediately get into an argument with the bodyguard. The banker gives up, gets out of the Mercedes and starts to walk inside. Suddenly another youth runs out from behind the seafood van and sprays the banker in the face with something that makes him scream in pain. The bodyguard gives chase, but the youth disappears into the Crowd. INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY--SAME We see Mac's back to us. He's still in bed. Far across the loft, by the window, we find Gin, phone in hand, staring out at the dawn rising over Hong Kong Harbor. GIN Hector Cruz on a secure line. VOICE Patching you. GIN He's not in the office? VOICE Patching you through. INT. HOTEL ROOM--DAY/INT.GIN'S LOFT--INTERCUT We see Cruz in some nondescript hotel room. Could be anywhere. CRUZ Gin? Where the hell are you? GIN I'm in the middle. CRUZ In the middle? You've got the Mask, why don't we have him? GIN He's on to something bigger. CRUZ Listen to me. Whatever you're doing, stop. Pull out. GIN Too late now. CRUZ Tell me where you are, or just leave the line open so I can trace you. GIN I'm going to get him, I promise you. And she hangs up the phone. Stares out the window as the first light hits the sails of the junks in the harbor. INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY Mac pours coffee into two cups. Picks them up, carries them to where-- INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY Gin sits at a keyboard working three Bang&Olufson-like computer terminals. The harbor beyond her is now bathed in full morning light. Mac brings her coffee. No wisecracks. MAC Good morning. She smiles at him, a luminous smile. GIN Morning. They look at each other and smile. That says everything. MAC Well...What are we doing? GIN You're being useless. I'm making us rich. She points to one screen. GIN (continuing) Currency data so we can do optimum conversions at the moment of transfer. MAC Transfer. GIN The eight billion. From them to us. MAC Right. The eight billion. A screen scrolling lists of names, photographs, bios... MAC (continuing) What's that? GIN Guest lists of every A-list party on turnover night. They'd be handy to disappear into, so we're invited to all of them. She stops the scrolling. A single name turns from green to glowing pink. HRH CHARLES, PRINCE OF WALES. She works the keys. The name is suddenly replaced by...ANDREW MACDOUGAL. MAC Perhaps it's for the best. I'm more gregarious. She points to a screen with security camera views of a now familiar modern building with wings. GIN Peoples China Bank. MAC Where the money is. On the big television monitor in the b.g. we see preparations for the celebration underway. Prince Charles meets with schoolchildren. Other VIPs arrive. GIN Our bank has a huge portion of its holdings invested in foreign banks. In hundreds of separate accounts. All controlled by a central computer.... She pulls out a CD ROM from an MC 900 Foot Jesus CD. GIN (continuing) It's taken me five years at Webber Insurance, nights, weekends, every spare minute, to make this CD. It has all the necessary instructions and confirmation codes to tell their computer to transfer reasonably modest sums out of thousands of those accounts, two, or three million at a crack. Total, eight billion and change. MAC And the money goes-- GIN Every wire transfer gets rocketed through a series of multiple switches. As soon as each deposit lands somewhere, it's shot somewhere else. It ends up so clean the Mafia couldn't find it. MAC But those instructions, they're recorded in the computer. GIN Nope. The CD instructs the computer to replace those instructions with an innocuous loan coded XJ-6. MAC A parting gift from the Empire. GIN Sit down, I'll show you how we're going to do it. He sits down beside her. On screen she scrolls up schematics of the bank--floor plan, elevators, security system. INT. OPTHAMOLOGISTS OFFICE--DAY--SAME The banker is gently set into an examining chair. The DOCTOR tilts his face up and puts eyedrops into the bankers reddened, painful eyes. The Doctor moves the Retinal Scanner against the banker's face. Its panel panel flashes numbers in red light. The Doctor looks into the box, to view... ...a red Laser scans the pupil, up and down, side to side. The Doctor moves to a computer monitor with a graphic rendering of the banker's retina, which he enlarges and studies for a moment, face grave. BANKER (Chinese, subtitled) What is it, this is killing me. The Doctor goes back to the machine, pushes another button, and a COMPACT DISK pops out of its drive. DOCTOR (Chinese, subtitled) I won't know until the lab has a chance to look at this. One piece of advice...huh? (beat) ...the red pepper, just use it on your food for a while. The Doctor smiles at his own little joke as he places the CD in a box. INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY Mac is studying the schematics of the building on Gin's computer screen as she sits beside him with stacks of gear. MAC So far as getting to the Vault, entry is doable. We'll need to be able to detect seismic sensors. She holds up a tiny device. GIN The oscilloscope's already programmed. MAC It's no good without the argon gas. She displays a tiny black canister. GIN Got it. MAC Then the vault, how to get in the vault, that's stumping me. GIN That's where the Mask comes in. MAC You've thought of everything. He smiles, relaxed. MAC (continuing) So how long till we do this? GIN We're doing it tonight. He's stunned. MAC You can't be serious. GIN That's the beauty of it. There's only one tiny window of time when this will work. At the handover of Hong Kong--from Britain to China. The handover from them to us. MAC You're out of your mind. We can't do a job like this with no rehearsal. GIN There's no way to practice this. And no time. Besides, I've planned it all. There aren't any surprises. MAC There's always a surprise. GIN I've covered everything. And you're the best, so-- MAC You're overestimating yourself again. What's worse, this time you're overestimating me. GIN Look, there's a video security system to bypass, that's the only hard part. You've done that a dozen times. MAC For God's sake, the only way I can get from one elevator to the other is to jump. GIN Feeling old? Her grin. GIN (continuing) You didn't feel that old to me. The phone rings. GIN (continuing; into phone) Do you have it? EXT. QUI'S JUNK--DAY They pull up in a water taxi. INT. QUI'S DINING ROOM--JUNK--DAY Gin and Mac are escorted into Qui's dining room, which is decorated with huge photographs of nude and semi-nude Western models, very artistic. Mac carries the bowling bag. Qui is eating lunch at a table covered with a British flag... QUI Virginia, you never disappoint. Like the place, Andy? MAC Please. Mr. MacDougal will do. Qui smiles. Mac fingers the table cloth. QUI This way. Doesn't matter if we spill. I trust you're not offended. MAC I'm a Scot. We've used this for worse. QUI Ah yes, I know. Would you like some 25-year-old Macallan? MAC Sure, I'll take a case. GIN We'd love to stay, but business calls. Qui reaches down, hands Gin a package. Gin opens it to reveal... Goggles. Like you would wear in a tanning salon. Only these are flesh-colored with one small hole in the center of the lens. She slips them on. GIN (continuing) How do I look? MAC Like a woman of mystery. QUI May I--? Mac hands him the bowling bag. GIN We better be going. Don't want to miss the last bagpipers. As they leave, Qui reaches down, picks up the Mask, considers it from all angles, leans back, puts it on his face. EXT. HARBOR--DAY--QUI'S They ride away from Qui's in a water taxi, past the fireworks barges. MAC Look at those fireworks. Going to be a hell of a show. Mac is taking in all the preparations. GIN Access codes to the vault are changed daily, passwords for our computer on the hour... MAC Can't be too careful. GIN Two men in the world don't need passwords or codes. Their retinas will scan to unlock everything. one of those two men is the chairman of the bank. MAC Let me guess. His retinal plate is in there. She grins. GIN Plus, they look cool with turtlenecks. INT. GIN'S LOFT--DAY--LATER Mac is packing up his black backpack. They're going down the checklist. GIN Extra carabiners. Mac displays them. GIN (continuing) Pulse detectors. MAC Charged. GIN Parachute. MAC Packed. He pats the black backpack. MAC (continuing) Done. (half-joking) And I assume you have the magic CD- ROM? GIN Surgically attached. Mac's still not liking this. MAC No way to take another day or two? GIN No. You'll see when we get inside. She looks at him with a smile, enjoying being in charge and having him off balance for a change. GIN (continuing) One more thing. Not on the checklist. She takes out a bottle of champagne. The same kind he had brought to the lighthouse before the museum job. MAC You shouldn't have. GIN Can't break tradition. It's bad luck. MAC There is one more thing. She looks at him. GIN You have something in mind? MAC Call it a new tradition. They come into each other's arms. EXT. HONG KONG HARBOR--NIGHT BOOM! A huge cannon is shot from the British warship. BOOM! Another. BOOM! And another. The ceremonies have begun. And we see them through the windows of-- INT. GIN'S LOFT--NIGHT Mac and Gin lie tangled together in bed. We also see the celebrations on the large video screen. GIN At the museum, in the water, I don't blame you for what you did. He touches her hair, so gently, so different from when he held her head under water. MAC That was a lifetime ago. GIN It was wrong to deceive you. MAC But that's all behind us now. Is it? That's the first question. And Gin has another. GIN But would you--would you-- MAC Have really held you under? He looks at her. She looks at him. MAC (continuing) Of course not. It was just a negotiating ploy. GIN Nothing like fear of drowning to focus your attention. MAC I'm sorry. And he is. She punches him, making a serious moment funny. GIN Like I wouldn't have done the same. They lie there for a minute, in the glow of each other. GIN (continuing) So what are you going to do with your share? MAC Oh, I don't care about the money. GIN Four billion dollars. MAC Seen one billion, seen them all. GIN That's because you grew up rich. MAC A flaw in your research, my dear. I grew up chewing shoe leather for breakfast. She traces patterns on his chest. GIN My parents managed hotels. Everyone around us was so rich...they never even looked at their bill. They just signed it. I thought, how wonderful, to have anything you wanted. Mac thinks about that. His conversation with Thibadeaux resonates with him still. MAC Can't buy me love, I believe a famous Brit once said that. She stares at him. There's something deep in her eyes, something that makes him turn away and stare at the live coverage on the television. We see an interview with Chris Pattern, the outgoing British Hong Kong leader. He turns up the sound. PATTERN (on TV, real footage) History is not just dates. History is what comes before and what comes after. Hong Kong was and will be Chinese. That is the promise, and that is the unshakable destiny. Mac watches and Gin watches Mac. PATTERN (continuing; on TV) Today is time for celebration, not sorrow. But here and there will perhaps be a touch of sadness, as comes with any departure. And the image switches to Chinese troops taking up positions on the border. Mac turns back from the television to Gin. MAC So it's all going to be over in a few hours. What does he mean? It's ambiguous. British rule in Hong Kong? Their relationship? GIN Not for me. MAC What? Another job? Stealing the Eiffel Tower? That's not exactly what she had in mind. GIN I'm going to disappear. I die in a car crash in Taiwan. Very easy to do. MAC They drive so recklessly there. GIN I'm leaving from the Nathan Road Station at 6:30 tomorrow morning. You could come too. Mac turns to Gin. MAC Did you ever feel that...you'd trade all your secrets. One time. Straight up. With someone. She strokes his hair. She wanted him to say he was coming with her. She has to protect herself a little now. GIN What would that make us, in love or something? He stares into her eyes...doesn't find what he is looking for. MAC Yes...or something. He gets up and goes past the TV screen to where the drummers and bagpipers are practicing "Beating Retreat". As outside, BOOM! The first fireworks stream across the sky. Gin swings her legs out of bed. GIN Showtime. EXT. ROUND MIDNIGHT MONTAGE The sky LIGHTS up with fireworks. Flashes of NOISE, SMOKE and LIGHT, as... CLOSE on the British Petroleum billboard, where the countdown CLOCK says, JUNE 30, 1997, 11:02 PM, 0 DAYS, 0 HOURS, 56 MINUTES, 41 SECONDS to: REUNION WITH CHINA! TIMES SQUARE is beyond BEDLAM in the driving RAIN. A carnival CRUSH of humanity singing, chanting, screaming, dancing, music and booze everywhere. EXT. HONG KONG SKIES--NIGHT Black Chinese Military HELICOPTERS CHURN through rain-soaked skies, SEARCHLIGHTS piercing mist that is already forming. EXT. TIMES SQUARE--NIGHT A massive VIDEO SCREEN shows the formal ceremony. Children singing, Chinese opera singers, princes, bureaucrats, soldiers, all in driving rain. And... ...a single Chinese PIPER in his kilt, playing "Amazing Grace" on bagpipes in the rain. EXT. TIMES SQUME--ANOTHER ANGLE--NIGHT In the square Mac has stopped Gin to watch the piper's farewell salute to the Colony. He's in a tux. She's in a great dress with a Chinese slit up the side. It's a powerful moment for a Scot. MAC I hate good-byes. On screen we see the Hong Kong police watching the bagpiper. Gin stops a street flower vender, buys a single RED ROSE, which she pins to Mac's tuxedo, just as she had back at the Safehouse before the Mask heist. GIN The sign of our partnership. MAC Brought us luck once, maybe it will again. Mac and Gin synchronize their GPS' and feed atomic time to their wrist watches. A signal goes out, there is a beep. They separate. Gin proceeds to... EXT. BANK--NIGHT Gin presents an inVitation to a SECURITY GUARD. Waiting, calmly. Gin smiles at the soldier. GIN What time do the tanks roll in? The soldier laughs. Admits her into... INT. PUBLIC LOBBY, PEOPLES CHINA BANK ...A vast atrium. The view straight up is interrupted only by a thick CANOPY OF GLASS stitched together with spidery skeletons of steel. Gin looks up as she rides the escalators to... INT. BANK--COCKTAIL PARTY (FIFTH FLOOR)--NIGHT Carrying a flute of champagne, Gin moves towards an hors d'oeuvre station, past a SECURITY GUARD who talks into a micro ear transceiver. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac, hidden in an alley behind the bank, puts on his BlACK OPERATION GEAR. Traffic is blocked. Mac clocks an approaching delivery truck. The truck is signaled through the barricade, then moves past camera blocking MAC. When it passes, Mac is gone. The truck drives onto a metal mesh elevator which lowers down to the loading platform. The elevator lands, gates open and the truck enters the loading clock. The driver waves to the security guard and backs up alongside the clock. Mac rolls from under the truck and swiftly... ...jumps onto loading platform and goes through two doors marked for 'EMPLOYEES ONLY'. He makes his way down the corridor towards... INT. BANK SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT THREE CHINESE SECURITY GUARDS observe the party on forty monitors. GUARD ONE offers commentary on the party guests. GUARD TWO watches real-time video of the atrium, offices, hallways, elevators, etc. GUARD THREE converses with the SECURITY GUARD in the atrium... EXT. BANK SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT Mac approaches the door to the engineering room, picks the lock. We hear the CLICK as Mac enters the room... INT. BANK ENGINEERING ROOM--NIGHT Hot and steamy. Electrical boxes and hum of central security system. Mac closes the door. Notifies Gin. MAC I'm in. INT. BANK COCKTAIL PARTY--NIGHT Gin doesn't blink. Moving around the room, she keeps an eye on the roaming SECURITY GUARDS... Gin approaches a group of GUESTS, joins in their discussion, while combing the room with her eyes. INT. BANK ENGINEERING ROOM--NIGHT Hundreds of cables, each one representing the video feed from cameras throughout the bank. Mac identifies the cable leading to the cameras on the 30th floor and talks into his transmitter. MAC Ready to override the video recorder controls. Buy me two minutes. INT. BANK COCKTAIL PARTY--NIGHT Gin spies a well-dressed CHINESE MAN and a SECURITY GUARD heading toward the VIP elevator. She follows them, opening her coin purse as she walks. INT. BANK ENGINEERING ROOM--NIGHT Mac carefully splices and disconnects a series of cables. Then reconnects the cables to a timing device and sets it to begin playback at 11:45 P.M. Reconnects the other cables... INT. BANK ELEVATOR AREA--NIGHT GIN'S POV: The VIP elevator is stationed on the 12th floor. Gin catches up with the CHINESE MAN just as he reaches for the button. Unzipping her purse, she trips, falling into the Man and sending coins flying everywhere... Gin apologizes, crouches to pick up the coins, her skirt hiking dangerously high on her thighs. The Chinese Man assists. The guard, vying for a better view, assists as well. INT. ENGINEERING ROOM--NIGHT Mac looks at his watch, exits to elevator doors across the hall. He takes a wedge and pries open the elevator doors, then jumps onto the counterweight. INT. BANK ELEVATOR AREA--NIGHT Gin finishes collecting her coins, thanks the men. The Security Guard pushes the elevator button. INT. ELEVATOR SHAFT--NIGHT Mac rides the counterweight, fast approaching the elevator, descending through the shaft. INT. BANK ELEVATOR AREA--NIGHT A group of tipsy VIP GUESTS approach the elevator. Gin makes herself a part of the group. She looks at the display as the numbers tick down 9... 8... INT. ELEVATOR SHAFT--NIGHT On Mac as the counterweight nears the 5th floor. A move of sheer precision and Mac leaps onto the top of the elevator. Checks his watch: 11:40 P.M. INT. BANK ELEVATOR AREA--NIGHT Gin checks her watch, 11:40 P.M. The elevator arrives. She enters with the VIP GUESTS. The GUARD pushes the button for the 12th floor. EXT. TOP OF ELEVATOR--NIGHT Mac locates the surveillance camera. He pUlls out the BNC connector from the camera and connects a box into the camera wires. Mac 'loops' a solid state video camera into the system. Connects the wires to the camera. Through the viewfinder we see an image of an empty elevator. INT. BANK SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT SECURITY GUARD ONE notices a glitch on the monitor for Gin's elevator. Orders another guard to check it out. As they argue, everything appears to go back to normal. We see through the monitor the party GUESTS exit the elevator on the 12th floor. Gin in the back of the elevator. INT. PARTY ELEVATOR--NIGHT The doors close. Gin snaps into professional mode. GIN Clear. No response from Mac. A slight tone of panic. GIN (continuing) Mac. You there? She listens for Mac. A signal of confirmation. GIN (continuing) Mac. Say something. Nothing but silence. Gin is growing anxious. Suddenly, the elevator ceiling vent opens. Mac drops down inside elevator. His voice is calm. A slight smile. MAC You don't rehearse, you have to put up with a little uncertainty. The elevator ascends towards 30th floor. Mac stares directly into the security camera in the corner of the elevator. INT. BANK SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT On the security monitor the elevator appears empty. The SECURITY GUARDS are eating hors d'oeuvres and watching the handover on television. SECURITY GUARD TWO looks at his watch 11:44 P.M. INT. ENGINEERING ROOM--NIGHT The time, on the electronic device, ticks to 11:45:00 P.M. The video recorder, instantly begins to rewind. The digital clock begins counting backwards. INT. PARTY ELEVATOR--NIGHT Mac and Gin are in the dark. POV Mac's watch 11:45 P.M.. Mac forces the doors open. THEIR POV: a long corridor with a secured, containment door at the end. Four video cameras are strategically placed to expose intruders, while an ultra-sonic alarm covers the floor. INT. BANK SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT REVERSE POV: the corridor of the 30th floor, where the elevator doors are still closed. In the lower corner of the monitor the digital clock ticks backwards. as the security tape now plays in reverse. INT. PARTY ELEVATOR--NIGHT Mac holds a miniature oscilloscope to his ear piece. Mac directs the oscilloscope to the ceiling. No pulse detected. He turns it towards the wall. Nothing. Mac kneels and holds the scope just above the floor. Hears a faint pulse. He adjusts the frequency and... the ultra sonic pulse, generated by the sensors, rings into his ear. MAC The pulse sensors are in the floor. This is where our dance lessons payoff. Mac quickly removes a canister of argon gas and vents it canister close to the floor. A blue/green vapor spews from the canister and flows down through the corridor. As each sensor in the floor emits a pulse it ripples through the argon fog in a rhythmic pattern. MAC (continuing) So long as we make contact with the floor between the pulses, we won't set off the alarm. Wrapping both arms around her waist, he moves her forward, legs entwined. The sensor nearest them emits a pulse into the fog, which then dissipates. MAC (continuing) And a one two three... They step into the fog like a sensual ballet. Then they do it again to the next wave. INT. SURVEILLANCE ROOM--NIGHT The Security guards gather around a monitor showing a very beautiful woman. It is right next to the corridor monitor. Just inches away and barely unobserved, we see the digital clock in the corridor ticking backwards. INT. BANK CORRIDOR--NIGHT Mac and Gin negotiate the last pulse before the door, which has a security keypad. Gin dusts it with ultraviolet powder, revealing smudged fingerprints on four of the keys. Mac plugs the numbers into a palm top computer which scans a series of combinations until it arrives at an anagram. Gin deciphers it. GIN Hong Kong is China. They enter the anagram. The door opens, revealing a steel lined ante-chamber leaking to the BANK VAULT. Round, huge, heavy steel. INT. BANK ANTECHAMBER--N!GHT Next to the Vault it is a mirrored PLATE with two APERTURES, set apart the distance of human eyes. Gin's goggled face DROPS into frame. She fits her eyes to the apertures... GIN (whispers) Open. Sesame. A red scanning light APPEARS. Tracks vertically. BEEPS. Tracks horizontally. And then...a soft CLICK. PULL BACK now, to see...Mac reaches to GRASP the handle, and...CLANG. The door swings OPEN. They stare inside. INT. BANK VAULT--NIGHT Icy blue light, a windowless ROOM. Two large MAINFRAME COMPUTERS face each other from opposite walls, work stations with PC monitors. As Mac closes the vault door behind them. Gin goes to the smaller mainframe. Pulls the high-resolution monitor around on its adjustable arm. The screensaver displays Guernsey cows swimming among tropical fish. She hits a key. The screen saver replaced by WELCOME. AUTHORIZATION MODE PLEASE. Two boxes for PASSWORD and SCAN. She hits SCAN. A plastic shield RISES, revealing... ...the mirrored PLATE, the tiny APERTURES. Gin leans to fit her goggled eyes in place. The red scanning light. Vertical track. BEEP. Horizontal track. And the monitor announces...WELCOME CHAIRMAN FEIHONG. Gin takes off the goggles and... ...THROWS them across the room to Mac at the larger mainframe. He repeats the scanning process as Gin is loads the precious CD-ROM into her mainframe's driver. Watches the screen... GIN Uploading. And you've got...two minutes, fifty seconds. WITH Mac now. Typing the words CONTROL PANEL. The screen now shows icons for the time setting, and he clicks his mouse to create a CLOCK in the center of the screen, labeled LOCAL TIME, and reacting 11:57:19, changing with each second that passes... MAC So let's see. Across town at the British Government House... INT. BRITISH GOVERNMENT HOUSE--WAR ROOM--NIGHT INTERCUT...frenzied activity in a large war room filled with computers, wall screens, every worker functioning at top speed...CONTINUE to hear Mac over this... MAC (V.O.) ...everyone is working frantically to complete transactions before they go off-line at midnight. INT. BANK VAULT--NIGHT Mac clicks his mouse to create a clock at the LEFT of his screen, labeled BRITISH TERMINAL TIME. It shows the same time as the local clock. MAC ...then, deep in the high-tech bowels of the Bank of China Building, just across the square... INT. BANK OF CHINA--WAR ROOM--NIGHT INTERCUT...an even larger war roam, even better staffed and equipped. Everyone...doing...nothing. Staring at blank monitors and wall screens. MAC (V.O.) ...the Chinese are sitting on their thumbs, waiting to come online at midnight... INT. BANK VAULT--NIGHT Mac clicks his mouse to create another clock at the RIGHT of the screen, labeled CHINA TERMINAL TIME. Shows the same time as the other clocks. 11:58:22. MAC I feel for these boys. Let's give them a breather, hmmm? CLICKS the mouse, and the BRITISH TERMINAL TIME begins FLASHING. MAC (continuing) We'll let the Brits go off-line 4 seconds early. As the flashing clock reaches 11:58:30, and Mac HITS the key four times, advancing the British clock to 34 seconds, four seconds later than the others. MAC (continuing) And we'll give our new Chinese rulers 4 extra seconds of rest before they have to go on-line. As the local and Chinese clocks reach 40 seconds, Mac HITS the key four times, regressing the Chinese clock back to 36 seconds. We watch all three clocks, clicking down the last moments of British rule. The British clock is 4 seconds FAST, the Chinese clock 4 seconds SLOW. MAC (continuing) Playing God here, Virginia. We've created 8 seconds that do not exist anywhere but in this room. LOCAL TIME...11:59:00. One minute to midnight. MAC (continuing) 8 seconds, where no one is on-line but your little CD-ROM. He turns to her across the room. MAC (continuing) And when, eventually, everyone discovers what transaction XJ6 was really about... GIN China will think it happened before midnight. Britain will swear it happened after midnight... MAC They'll each be positive the other guy did it. (beat) I fear an ugly international incident. She squints across at his clock GIN Britain off-line in 18 seconds. We're bulletproof. His smile. Bittersweet and real... MAC Nothing is bulletproof. Ever. He turns back to his screen. MAC (continuing) Britain goes bye-bye in 6...5...4...3... INT. BRITISH GOVERNMENT HOUSE--NIGHT All screens go DARK. A logo APPEARS of a popping Champagne BOTTLE, whose spray forms a Union Jack twined with a PRC flag, everyone SHOUTS, cheers or curses, and... INT. BANK VAULT--NIGHT Gin...striking ENTER, the screen flashing TRANSACTIONS XJ6 PROCESSING. GIN (softly) Jesus God, it's going through. MAC (watching his clocks) Hong Kong midnight, happy new year. Except at China Bank. RAPID CUTS at moment of MIDNIGHT... ...police pulling British badges from their hats, replacing them with Chinese insignia. Chinese troops streaming across the border and taking up positions, stadium crowd CHEERING WILDLY, PAN up to...FIREWORKS EXPLODING in awe-inspiring profusion, as the land that invented fireworks launches a display, that turns the already rain-misted sky into an impenetrable red, green and blue FOG... And BACK TO... GIN (to her screen) C'mon, c'mon... Her screen flashes TRANSACTION XJ6 COMPLETED, hear her SHRIEK of ecstasy, as we...INTERCUT INT. BANK OF CHINA--WAR ROOH--NIGHT Dark screens suddenly LIGHT with the same PARTY LOGO. Only nobody cheers. They just get to work. INT. BANK VAULT--NIGHT MAC You did it. She nods, allows herself a grin. Then reaches to push a button to eject the CD-ROM. But NOTHING HAPPENS. She blinks. This is not according to plan. She...hits it again. Harder. JAMS it now. Nothing. GIN The CD won't come out of the driver. Houston. We have a problem. MAC Relax, don't jam it... GIN (JAMMING IT) FUCKING THING!!! He crosses the room. She's rummaging on a nearby desk, finds a LETTER OPENER. MAC Don't panic, now, there's no rush... GIN We can't leave it IN THERE, it's got all our accounts, everything that can NAIL us to a goddam CROSS!!! She's fitting the letter opener INTO the narrow slot above the lid of the driver. MAC Easy with that, there's no rush... WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! Every SIREN in the skyscraper is SHRIEKING, lights are FLASHING CRIMSON, Gin's screen says SECURITY BREACH in a selection of languages. Gin just staring at it. GIN There's a rush. The sirens are EAR-SPLITTING. Elsewhere in this building, all hell must be breaking loose. Gin is YANKING Mac's arm... GIN (continuing) MOVE IT, WHAT ARE YOU WAITING F... MAC The disc is still in there. GIN We can't help it, we...we've gotta... He stares at her. In one motion, he SNATCHES a stapler from the desk and SMASHES the driver with all his strength. It pops open. Calmly, he plucks her CD from the tray. GIN (continuing) What a guy. But just as she's about to bolt...he holds up one hand. Slips another CD from his pocket. We see the words KENNY G. MAC Was wondering where to leave this... Pops it IN the drive. SLAMS it shut. They run for the door. EXT. CORRIDOR--NIGHT Just before they get to the elevator the doors open. Two SECURITY GUARDS run out with guns drawn. Mac and Gin turn and run down the corridor, toward the vault, but the door is closing automatically! Mac takes the black bag off his shoulder and slides it down the corridor like a bowling ball. It jams in the door! The Security Guards take aim. Mac and Gin run for the open door. The Guards fire just as Mac shoves Gin through the door and leaps through himself. As he lands he grabs the bag and the vault's doors close. Bullets twang against it. They're trapped in the vault. MAC You ever get the feeling you've been somewhere before? We bear the guards banging on the door and yelling. MAC (continuing) Some people, when you don't invite them, they take it personally. Gin is close to losing her cool. Gunshots have a way of doing that. GIN The door's the only way out! MAC I sincerely hope not. The stapler jangles, then falls off the top of the CPU where Mac had left it. We hear and feel the room begin to vibrate. MAC (continuing) Blackhawk. At that moment right in front of Gin a Blackhawk helicopter rises into view. A SWAT gunner aims an RPG at the window. Mac leaps toward Gin, grabs her and carries her out of frame just as a tear gas grenade rockets through the window, trailing smoke. CRASH! The grenade hurtles through the window, making a neat hole. It explodes inside. Tear gas rises up like mist. Gin and Mac begin to choke. Mac looks around desperately as the helicopter searches the room with blue laser lights that reach into every corner. EXT. BANK--NIGHT The helicopter rises up the side of the building, heading for the roof. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Down on the street, SWAT teams jump out of vans and run into the building. INT. BANK--NIGHT The SWAT teams wait for the VIP elevator. INT. VAULT--NIGHT Mac yells at Gin to get her moving. MAC Get on the computer! Check the corridor. Coughing and choking, Gin works the terminal. Mac grabs a chair and flings it against the window where the tear gas grenade has already made a hole. GIN That's your plan? Break the window? The video of the corridor comes on the screen. GIN (continuing) I got it. INT. VAULT--VIDEO On the screen we see the SWAT team come running out the elevator. They take some sort of magnetic explosive device and attach it to the vault door. INT. VAULT--NIGHT Gin watches the SWAT team run back down the corridor. GIN This is bad. Mac keeps slamming the chair against the window. It begins to break. Mac smashes through the window! MAC Come on! Gin comes toward him and he leads her out onto the window ledge. BOOM! The vault door explodes! EXT. BANK--NIGHT The debris blasts out the broken window, barely missing Mac and Gin. INT. VAULT--NIGHT The SWAT team rushes into the room, combat ready. But it's empty. One man looks out the broken window and jabbers in Chinese. They radio to their leader. Then a couple of them climb out the window, following Mac and Gin. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Gin kicks off her shoes so that they can climb toward a vast glass wing-like structure. GIN Jesus. MAC You can do it. EXT. BANK--ROOF--NIGHT SWAT men rush from the helicopter, putting on climbing harnesses. Others take up firing positions. LEADER (Chinese) Fire only on command! EXT BANK--NIGHT Mac and Gin reach the glass wing. Mac takes a quick assessment of the situation. EXT. ROOF--HIS VIEW--NIGHT The SWAT team preparing to descend. EXT. BANK--HIS VIEW--NIGHT Other SWAT men climbing up. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac and Gin are trapped. No way out. Mac spots a thick cable with a string of lights attached running from the roof down to the wing and then to the ground. That's their way out! MAC Time to go. They run across the wing, then slide down! It looks like they're going over the edge! EXT. BANK--ANOTHER ANGLE--NIGHT But they land hard on a ledge instead. Mac takes carabiners out of his black bag and fastens on his harness. He tosses carabiners and a harness to Gin. The cable runs down to the ground close to the water. They can make it out there. Gin begins to clip her carabiner onto the cable. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Seeing Mac and Gin's intention, the helicopter drops down and attaches its hook to the cable, then slowly begins to climb. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac sees the cable tighten and looks up as the helicopter rips the cable off the roof! MAC Unclip! Now! The cable comes loose and begins to fall in a stream of lights, coming right at them! Gin struggles to get her carabiner loose. If she doesn't, the falling cable will rip her off the bank and carry her to the ground far below! Her hands shake, but just in time Gin detaches the carabiner! SWOOSH! The cable falls past them in a stream of lights, clattering and banging like a falling dragon. Mac and Gin run the only way they can. The two SWAT men climbing up from the vault run after them. The helicopter swoops down low and fast right over their heads! EXT. BANK--NIGHT They reach a large glass canopy. Dead end. Mac casts around for all option, any option. Across the canopy he sees a large air conditioning system. MAC Come on. GIN No way. MAC Go! She takes a breath and runs. He follows. The helicopter swoops down on them as they run across a roof of glass, on a canopy high above the lobby. EXT. BANK--ROOF--NlGHT The leader gives his orders. LEADER (Chinese, subtitled) We want him alive. The sharpshooter takes aim. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac runs ahead of Gin, across the glass and the girders. BANG! The rifle round hits him in the upper arm. The impact knocks him off his feet! He slams into the glass! The impact of Mac's fall starts the glass cracking like ice. Huge cracks race out from Mac! Gin turns and sees Mac in the middle of a spiderweb of cracking glass! Above her, SWAT men are rappelling down. MAC Jump! Gin stops. MAC (continuing) The glass is about to go! Mac struggles to his feet and starts to run, but the glass is cracking ahead of him! The cracks reach toward Gin. She turns to run, but the glass breaks beneath her feet! She leaps and grabs onto the ledge. Safe! But Mac falls through the glass! At the last instant he grabs one of the beams with one hand and dangles. Through the pain he tries to grab it with his wounded arm. Blood runs down his arm and onto his face! Gin looks back to see Mac dangling by the beam. GIN Hang on. MAC Get out of here! Gin looks out toward Mac. The glass has broken. The only way is to walk across the exposed beams covered in glass shards. Gin stares at what she has to do. She is terrified of heights. She has no life line. But Mac is out there. She takes a breath and heads out onto the beam. INT. BANK LOBBY--NIGHT The police are herding the guests out of the party. One guest stops. Something has fallen an his neck. He puts his hand back. It's blood. Mac's blood. He looks up and sees Mac hanging from the girders. And he sees, walking out toward him, balanced on a beam, Gin. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Gin walks sloWly on the beam but the effort is getting to her. Her foot steps on glass. She jerks it back in an involuntary motion, loses her balance, almost falls. She sits down and edges over the last few feet. MAC I cannot get rid of you. GIN No, you can't. Gin struggles to help Mac to safety. MAC Get the rope! Gin pulls the rope off. MAC (continuing) Make a sling. She does, and he hooks it under his wounded arm so that he's supported. With his good arm and with Gin's help he pulls himself up. MAC (continuing) Go! She takes a breath, gets up. and they run across the beams to the air conditioning system. Mac breaks down the door. A great blast of air hits them in the face. They run inside. INT. AIR CONDITIONING SHAFT--NIGHT Mac leads Gin down the air conditioning shaft. They reach an elbow. No way out but down. Wind whistles up. EXT. BANK--NIGHT The SWAT team reaches the wing roof and heads toward the air conditioning system. INT. AIR CONDITIONING SHAFT--NIGHT Mac takes the parachute off his back. MAC Put this on! GIN I'm not leaving without you. He straps the chute on her back. MAC You think I'd jump down there? The fall will probably kill you. Gin is poised at the edge. MAC (continuing) Trust me. And he shoves her into the void. INT. AIR CONDITIONING SHAFT--ANOTHER ANGLE--NIGHT Gin dropping like a bullet. WHAM! The chute pops open. INT. AIR CONDITIONING SHAFT--NIGHT Mac is weak from loss of blood. He can hear the SWAT team coming down the AC system. Up above him is a huge ventilation fan, through which he can see the lights of the helicopter. INT. AIR CONDITIONING SHAFT--NIGHT The SWAT team charges down the shaft, but when they reach the elbow...nothing is there. The SWAT man gets on his radio. SWAT MAN They've gone to the basement. They run out. As they leave we PAN UP a trail of blood drops and notice that the fan isn't turning anymore. INT. BANK--NIGHT The SWAT teams are converging on the basement. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac climbs painfully up the dark side of the tower. Out in the harbor we can see fireworks exploding, the beautiful comets of red, orange, blue, and green reflecting in the side of the bank. INT. BASEMENT--NIGHT A SWAT man picks up a parachute and shows it to the Leader. No Gin. EXT. BANK--ROOF--NIGHT Mac rolls up onto the roof, breathing hard and in pain. Across the way is the helicopter, its rotors gently idling. The pilot is standing off to the side having a cigarette and watching the amazing fireworks display. Everyone else has gone to the basement. INT. BANK--NIGHT Gin emerges from behind a door and blends into the crowd spilling out into the street. She is desperately concerned about Mac but her face betrays nothing. EXT. BANK--ROOF--NIGHT Mac pulls himself into the helicopter. He gives it some throttle. The blades turn faster. Hearing the noise, the pilot runs toward the helicopter. The blades turn faster. Mac lifts it up and drops it off the side of the bank! The helicopter plummets down, gaining air speed. INT. HELICOPTER--NIGHT Mac fights the controls, trying to get enough speed to level off. EXT. BANK--BELOW The crowd spills out onto the pavement. On the big TV screen we see a Busby Berkeley dance number on a barge. The noise of the helicopter makes Gin look up. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Mac's helicopter swoops up just as another SWAT helicopter rises off the opposite building and come after him. EXT. HONG KONG--NIGHT--HELICOPTER CHASE The two choppers race through the buildings of Hong Kong. Smoke from the fireworks obscures everything. Mac's chopper emerges from the smoke, flying almost sideways between two buildings! The other chopper comes through the same smoke, right on its tail! The smoke wreathing the city is all colors. It's like a war zone from all the fireworks. We see the fireworks reflected in the side of a building, and then, WHAM! The reflection of Mac's helicopter slices through and the chopper itself roars away. INT. HELICOPTER--NIGHT Mac can barely see. The buildings come at him so fast, it's like an amazing video game. He can't think. He can only react. He glances back at the pursuing chopper. MAC Come on, go join the party. Mac turns his helicopter out to sea, out toward the huge barges shooting off fireworks from their big mortars. BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! The fireworks stream into the air. EXT. BANK--NIGHT Gin works her way toward a SWAT man who is monitoring the helicopter's radio. EXT. HONG KONG HARBOR--NIGHT Mac flies over the water. Another helicopter joins the chase! EXT. BANK--NIGHT On the big screen we see an English and a Chinese opera singer singing a duet of "I'll See You Again." EXT. HONG KONG HARBOR--NIGHT Mac's helicopter flies right into the fireworks! One of the missiles hits his rear rotor! His helicopter begins to spin! It crashes into Hong Kong harbor! EXT. BANK--NIGHT The duet concludes. They hold hands and take a bow. Gin stands next to a SWAT man who monitors the helicopter's radio net. HELICOPTER PILOT (on radio) It's down. We are on her face. HELICOPTER PILOT (continuing; on radio) No sign of anything, no wreckage, nothing. Gin's eyes go wet. She can't believe it. EXT. HONG KONG--NIGHT Gin walks away, away from the crowds of revelers. On the big screen we see cuts of: ECU of a kettle drum, then Chinese school children singing, then a Chinese opera. Behind her the fireworks continue, out in the harbor. As Gin walks, we stay on her face. Gradually the music and the fireworks fade away. EXT. HONG KONG--EARLY MORNING A ghost town. Empty wet streets strewn with the debris of celebration. The only person on the street is a Chinese street cleaner, who wears a rice hat and a green plastic garbage bag for a raincoat against the gentle drizzle. The big TV screens are blank. INT. TK SUBWAY STATION--DAY Station clock ticks closer to 6:30. The station is completely deserted except for Gin, who is sitting on platform seat watching the clock. She wears a soft blonde wig. She hears a footstep scrape on the concrete. Turns. There, behind her, walking toward her, is a man. It's... GIN Mac. He's pale and bandaged. His face is unreadable. Hers is not. A flood of emotions hit her. As he gets closer his face tells her something, something that almost makes her stop. Almost. But the emotion and the relief and the, yes, love, carry her on. She heads toward him. GIN (continuing) Oh, God, Mac. He takes her arm. GIN (continuing) What's wrong. MAC Nothing is wrong. Everything is the way it has to be. In my left coat pocket is a packet. Passports, hotel reservations, tickets. She stares at him. MAC (continuing) Get it. She does. MAC (continuing) I've changed your travel plans. INT. SUBWAY TUNNEL--DAY They round a corner. Ahead we can see some people on the platform. MAC Take the airport subway, but change at Jordan Station for Kowloon Tong. GIN But-- MAC It's only ninety seconds up the line. You're on a connection to a trans Siberian express. GIN What about you? She stares at him, even more confused. Then she sees one of the men on the platform. A black man. Thibadeaux. And another man, off to the side. And a tough looking woman. MAC You have the right to remain silent. But anything you say may be taken down in evidence and used against you-- GIN My god-- There's an instant of blinding clarity. GIN (continuing) --You're a cop. MAC Both sides of the street, I'm afraid. Her knees buckle. MAC (continuing) Don't go down. Stay up. Gin and Mac, slowly walking toward the platform. In the b.g. a train rumbles toward the platform. We see Thibadeaux, starting to move slowly. GIN He looks familiar. MAC That would be Thibadeaux. The cop I work for every now and then. Catching thieves. The really good ones--the ones who imitate me. And that is when she sees the other man emerging from behind Thibadeaux. A very familiar man in ex-FBI man black. CRUZ. GIN My God. Gin stares at him; starting to lose it. MAC They've been on to you all along. Knew you had a big job going. GIN You gave them the eight billion. MAC You mean the seven billion. She looks at him, not believing the implication. MAC (continuing) You'll just have to make do with one. The train rattles into the station. The four cops are ready to move. MAC (continuing) Smile. They won't move until I raise my arm. (beat) But it's sore. Might take me a minute. In the meantime, reach into my other pocket. She does. Can't believe what she finds there. MAC (continuing) That's right. It's a gun. Take it out. Point it at my head. She doesn't know what to do. MAC (continuing) There's always a surprise. I believe I keep telling you that. Her face as she realizes. He's coming. The subway train cars open with a whoosh. She pulls out the gun. Points it at his head. GIN Don't move! the cops on the platform freeze. Mac slowly raises his hands. GIN (continuing) You move, I'll blow his head off! Gin backs toward the open doors of the subway cars. Her hand guides Mac back with her, her other hand holds the gun on his head. The doors start to close. She gives Mac a shove and leaps in, just as the doors slam shut. The cops run toward the car. But the train pulls away. MAC The airport. She's changing at Mongkok station. We can cut her off! Walkie talkies whip out. IRISH WOMAN Yaumatei changes for the airport it's closer... CRUZ Jordan's next. She'd get off there. THIBADEAUX Go where Mac says. They turn to look at him. CRUZ But-- THIBADEAUX He knows what he's doing. Go, goddamit! And they head off on the run, all except Cruz and Thibadeaux. CRUZ We had her. We had her dead. THIBADEAUX Don't worry. Mac looks at him, not sure what he means. THIBADEAUX (continuing) I'm sure they'll catch her. Cruz isn't at all sure. He stares at Mac with his opaque cop eyes. CRUZ Must have been scared, her holding that gun to your head, huh? MAC That's right. He holds Mac's gaze, maybe not buying this at all. Thibadeaux leans back on his heels, takes a look at Mac, turns to Cruz. THIBADEAUX Hector-- CRUZ I'm telling you here and now, I'm damn sure running the next one myself. THIBADEAUX Give us a minute. He turns and walks away with the gait of a man not expecting to find anything. Mac sits down wearily on the bench. Thibadeaux sits beside him, pulls two paper cups of coffee out of a bag. THIBADEAUX (continuing) Coffee? Mac shakes his head. No thanks. THIBADEAUX (continuing) Takes a lot out of you, one like this. MAC Yes it does. THIBADEAUX I been meaning to tell you, far as I'm concerned you're over the hill. Mac stares at him. THIBADEAUX (continuing) You're no good to me anymore. I'm taking you off the books. Mac isn't sure if Thibadeaux means what he thinks he does. THIBADEAUX (continuing) Do I have to spell it out? You're fired. And don't go asking me for a pension or shit. He stands wearily up. THIBADEAUX (continuing) See you. MAC Probably not. THIBADEAUX Yeah. Probably not. And he walks away, leaving Mac sitting there on the bench. We move across the platform, watching Mac sit there. Another train comes in. People get off. People get on. Some still carry flags. The train pulls away. The bench is empty. We follow the train into the tunnel and then... INT. SIBERIAN EXPRESS--DAY We are on another train, a passenger train. We find Gin sitting beside the window. China is passing by outside, but she really doesn't see it. In her lap is the packet Mac gave her. She reaches down and opens it... Inside are more tickets, an itinerary, and a passport. Idly curious, she opens the passport... Pressed inside the passport is the single RED ROSE she gave Mac to wear the night before. She picks it up, stares at it. And knows what it means. The sign of their partnership. And much more. We linger on her face. EXT. CHINA--DAY The train speeds on into China, taking her westwards to her unshakable destiny. FADE OUT: