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THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS      

Thriller, Horror Film studies - helping to promote the film industry

 

Without the superb cast and brilliant direction of Jonathan Demme, this movie would not have been the great success that is was. Study the script below and you may see what we mean.

 

 

      Silence of the Lambs, movie  cover

 

  

"THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS"

by

Ted Tally

Based on the novel by

Thomas Harris



FADE IN:

INT. GRUBBY HOTEL CORRIDOR - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

A woman's face BACKS INTO SHOT, her head resting against 
grimy wallpaper. She is tense, sweaty, wide-eyed with 
concentration. This is CLARICE STARLING, mid-20's, trim, 
very pretty. She wears Kevlar body armor over a navy 
windbreaker, khaki pants. Her thick hair is piled under a 
navy baseball cap. A revolver, clutched in her right hand, 
hovers by her ear. She raises a speedloader, in her left 
hand, locks it into her cylinder, twists and reloads.

CLOSE ON

A guest room door, with a small, wired pack attached to its 
knob. Suddenly, wish a sharp CRACK!, the knob explodes, and 
the door bursts open.

WITH CLARICE - MOVING SHOT

as she runs around a corner, through a cloud of smoke. She 
shoulders aside the shattered door and rushes inside, gun at 
the ready in both hands...

CUT TO:

INT. HOTEL ROOM - DAY

CLARICE'S POV - MOVING - as she first sees, sitting on the 
edge of a bed - a FEMALE HOSTAGE. Black, late 20's, gagged, 
hands behind her back. Then, SWIVELLING... she sees a startled 
MALE SUSPECT, white, mid-20's, standing by a window with a 
rifle in his hands. He is turning towards her...

Clarice drops into a combat crouch, gun extended, and shouts.

CLARICE
Freeze! FBI!

CLARICE'S POV - SLOW MOTION

all natural SOUND suspended - as the Suspect faces her with 
a strange, pleading expression. The rifle is rising in his 
hands, but oddly enough, it is held across his chest, not 
pointing. Then another puzzling detail registers...

THE SUSPECT'S HANDS

are taped to his gun, away from the trigger; he couldn't use 
it even if he tried. Suddenly we hear a metallic CLICK, which 
registers with unnatural amplification, as - Clarice reacts, 
drops to the floor, rolling sideways, and -

THE "HOSTAGE"

pulls a revolver out from behind her back, still in SLOW 
MOTION, raising it in her untied hands. She fires repeatedly, 
flames leaping from the muzzle; the SOUND is an echoing roar 
in these close quarters, but -

Clarice has come up on one knee, beside an armchair, and is 
already firing back herself, two quick SHOTS, which send -

THE "HOSTAGE"

pitching over the bed, backwards, to shudder and lie still 
in a haze of gunsmoke. Clarice rushes to her, clamping one 
knee down on her gun hand, still keeping her covered in case 
of movement. HOLD for a few beats... then we hear the shrill 
blast of a WHISTLE from somewhere, off screen, as normal 
ACTION and SOUND are restored.

BRIGHAM (O.S.)
Okay, people, good exercise...

Clarice relaxes, lowering her gun. The lights brighten.

PULLING BACK

we see that we're in some sort of auditorium, with the "hotel 
room" and its "corridor" built as a training set. JOHN BRIGHAM 
walks onto this set, thumbing a stopwatch. Mid-40's, ex-
Marine. His T-shirt's lettering says "Firearms Instructor / 
FBI Academy."

BRIGHAM
Starling's reaction time was 
excellent. Let's break. Critique in 
five.

A class of about forty young FBI trainees, of both sexes, 
begins to rise from their seats, mingling and chatting. 

Clarice nods amiably to the "Suspect", then gives her 
"Hostage" a hand up. It's ARDELIA MAPP, her roommate. Her 
broad, clever face breaks into a big smile, as they both 
remove ear plugs. Clarice's voice has just a soft trace of 
southern accent.

ARDELIA
Damn, Clarice, how'd you make me?

CLARICE
(indicating her gun)
Never cock. Just squeeze.

ARDELIA
(grins)
I love it when you talk dirty.

As Brigham joins them, Clarice can't resist a star pupil's 
little smile of pride. He frowns good-naturedly.

BRIGHAM
What're you laughin' at, Junior G-
Man? She got off four rounds to your 
two.

He takes out a steel-coiled grip flexer, drops it onto her 
palm.

BRIGHAM
(continuing)
One hundred reps, each hand, every 
day. Now tidy up, the Section Chief 
wants to see you.

He nods a direction, then moves off. Clarice, with her smile 
finally fading, looks out into the auditorium.

SPECIAL AGENT JACK CRAWFORD

sits on the top step of the aisle, looking down at her. He 
is 53, strongly built. He rises impassively, exits through 
the back door. He carries a think manila envelope under one 
arm.

Ardelia who is helping Clarice unbuckle her bullet-proof 
vest, follows her worried gaze.

CLARICE
What'd I do?

ARDELIA
Stay cool. Just remember to call him 
"God."

CUT TO:

EXT. FBI ACADEMY GROUNDS, QUANTICO, VIRGINIA - DAY

Crawford is watching a group of trainees on the firing range, 
as Clarice joins him. He looks tired, haunted. Between master 
and student, we sense a subtle, muted tug of sexuality.

CRAWFORD
Starling, Clarice M., good morning.

CLARICE
Good morning, Mr. Crawford.

CRAWFORD
Your instructors tell me you're doing 
well. Top quarter of the class.

CLARICE
I hope so. They haven't posted 
anything.

CRAWFORD
A job's come up and I thought about 
you. Not really a job, more of - an 
interesting errand. Walk me to my 
car, Starling.

They begin to cross the academy grounds. A group of trainees 
jogs by, in matching sweats, following a p.e. coach.

CRAWFORD
We're trying to interview all of the 
serial killers now in custody, for a 
psychobehavioral profile. Could be a 
big help in unsolved cases. Most of 
them have been happy to talk to us. 
They have a compulsion to boast, 
these people... Do you spook easily, 
Starling?

CLARICE
Not yet.

CRAWFORD
You see, the one we want most refuses 
to cooperate. I want you to go after 
him again today, in the asylum.

CLARICE
Who's the subject?

CRAWFORD
The psychiatrist - Dr. Hannibal 
Lecter.

Clarice stops walking, goes very still. A beat.

CLARICE
The cannibal...

Crawford doesn't respond, except to study her face.

CLARICE
Yes, well... Okay, right. I'm glad 
for the chance, sir, but - why me?

CRAWFORD
You're qualified and available. And 
frankly, I can't spare a real agent 
right now.

He walks on again, at a faster clip. She hurried to keep up.

CRAWFORD
I don't expect him to talk to you, 
but I have to be able to say we 
tried... Lecter was a brilliant 
psychiatrist, and he knows all the 
dodges.
(hands her the manila 
envelope)
Dossier on him, copy of our 
questionnaire, special ID for you... 
If he won't talk, then I want straight 
reporting. How's he look, how's his 
cell look, what's he writing? The 
Director himself will see your report, 
over your own signature - if I decide 
it's good enough. I want that by 
0800 Wednesday, and keep this to 
yourself.

They're reached his car. His driver stamps on a cigarette, 
climbs in behind the wheel. BURROUGHS, his assistant, says 
something into a walkie-talkie, then opens the back door. 
But Crawford pulls her aside, a hand on her shoulder. His 
intensity is scary.

CRAWFORD
Now. I want your full attention, 
Starling. Are you listening to me?

CLARICE
Yes sir.

CRAWFORD
Be very careful with Hannibal Lecter. 
Dr. Chilton at the asylum will go 
over the physical procedures used 
with him. Do not deviate from them, 
for any reason. You tell him nothing 
personal, Starling. Believe me, you 
don't want Hannibal Lecter inside 
your head... Just do your job, but 
never forget what he is.

CLARICE
(a bit unnerved)
And what is that, sir?

CHILTON (V.O.)
Oh, he's a monster. A pure 
psychopath...

CUT TO:

INT. CHILTON'S OFFICE - BALTIMORE STATE HOSPITAL FOR THE 
CRIMINALLY INSANE - DAY

CLOSE ON an ID card held in a male hand. Clarice's photo, 
official-looking graphics. It calls her a "Federal 
Investigator."

CHILTON (O.S.)
It's so rare to capture one alive. 
From a research point of view, Dr. 
Lecter is our most prized asset...

DR. FREDERICK CHILTON looks up from her card. A smarmy little 
peacock, behind a vast desk; he's conceived an instant, 
hopeless letch for Clarice. He smiles, stroking her card 
with his beloved gold pen.

CHILTON
You know, we get a lot of detectives 
here, but I must say, I can't ever 
remember one so attractive...

NEW ANGLE - REVEALS CLARICE

now wearing a more feminine skirt suit. Hair neatly coiled, 
elegant shoulder bag, briefcase. He has rudely left her 
standing.

CHILTON
Will you be in Baltimore overnight...? 
Because this can be quite a fun town, 
if you have the right guide.

Clarice tries, unsuccessfully, to hide her distaste for him.

CLARICE
I'm sure it's a great town, Dr. 
Chilton, but my instructions are to 
talk to Lecter and report back this 
afternoon.

CHILTON
(pause, sourly)
I see.
(beat)
Let's make this quick, then. I'm 
busy.

CUT TO:

INT. ASYLUM CORRIDOR - UPPER FLOOR - DAY

Clarice flinches as a heavy steel gate CLANGS shut behind 
her, the bolt shooting home. Chilton walks ahead of her.

CHILTON
Lecter carved up nine people - that 
we're sure of - and cooked his 
favorite bits. We've tried to study 
him, of course - but he's much too 
sophisticated for the standard tests. 
And my, does he hate us! Thinks I'm 
his nemesis... Crawford's very clever, 
isn't he? Using you.

CLARICE
How do you mean, Dr. Chilton?

CHILTON
A pretty young woman, to turn him 
on? I don't believe Lecter's ever 
seen a woman in eight years. And oh, 
are you ever his "taste" - so to 
speak.

CLARICE
I graduated magna from UVA, Doctor. 
It's not a charm school.

CHILTON
Good. Then you should be able to 
remember the rules.

CUT TO:

INT. DIFFERENT CORRIDOR - LOWER FLOOR - DAY

A darker, even grimmer area. Heavy grids over the lights. 
Distant SLAMMINGS and faint, hoarse SHOUTS. They walk briskly.

CHILTON
Do not reach through the bars, do 
not touch the bars. You pass him 
nothing but soft paper - no pens or 
pencils. No staples or paperclips in 
his paper. Use the sliding food 
carrier, no exceptions. Do not accept 
anything he attempts to hold out to 
you. Do you understand me?

CLARICE
I understand.

CHILTON
I'm going to show you why we insist 
on such precautions... On the 
afternoon of July 8, 1981, he 
complained of chest pains and was 
taken to the dispensary. His 
mouthpiece and restraints were removed 
for an EKG. When the nurse bent over 
him, he did this to her...

He hands Clarice a small, dog-eared photo. Looking at it, 
she is stopped in her tracks. This pleases Chilton.

CHILTON
The doctors managed to re-set her 
jaw, more or less, and save one of 
her eyes. His pulse never got over 
eighty-five, even when he ate her 
tongue.
(pauses, he smiles)
I keep him in here.

He turns, pushes a button. A steel door BUZZES slowly open, 
and BARNEY - a big, impassive orderly - awaits them in an 
anteroom. On its walls: restraints, mouthpieces, Mace, 
tranquilizer guns.

CLARICE
(quickly blocking him)
Dr. Chilton - if Lecter feels you're 
his enemy - as you've said - then 
maybe I'll have more luck by myself. 
What do you think?

CHILTON
(annoyed)
You might have suggested that in my 
office, and saved me the time.

CLARICE
But then I would've missed the 
pleasure of your company.

She holds out the photo. A beat. He grabs it, jaw twitching.

CHILTON
When she's finished, bring her out.

He turns on his heel, goes. Barney smiles reassuringly.

BARNEY
Hi, I'm Barney. He told you, don't 
get near the bars?

CLARICE
(shaking his hand)
Clarice Starling. Yes, he did.

BARNEY
Okay. Past the others, it's the last 
cell. Stay to the middle. I put out 
a chair for you.

Sensing her tension, he indicates a nearby security monitor.

BARNEY
I'm watching. You'll do fine.

Clarice nods gratefully. She looks down the long corridor, 
takes a deep breath, walks into it. He watches her go.

CUT TO:

INT. DR. LECTER'S CORRIDOR - DAY

MOVING SHOT - with Clarice, as her footsteps ECHO. High to 
her right, surveillance cameras. On her left, cells. Some 
are padded, with narrow observation slits, others are normal, 
barred... Shadowy occupants pacing, MUTTERING... Suddenly a 
dark figure in the next-to-last cell hurtles towards her, 
his face mashing grotesquely against his bars as he hisses.

DARK FIGURE
I c-can sssmell your cunt!

Clarice flinches momentarily, but then walks on.

DR. LECTER'S CELL

is coming slowly INTO VIEW... Behind its barred front wall 
is a second barrier of stout nylon net... Sparse, bolted-
down furniture, many softcover books and papers. On the walls, 
extraordinarily detailed, skillful drawings, mostly European 
cityscapes, in charcoal or crayon.

Clarice stops, at a polite distance from his bars, clears 
her throat.

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter... My name is Clarice 
Starling. May I talk with you?

Dr. Hannibal Lecter is lounging on his bunk, in white pajamas, 
reading an Italian Vogue. He turns, considers her... A face 
so long out of the sun, it seems almost leached - except for 
the glittering eyes, and the wet red mouth. He rises smoothly, 
crossing to stand before her; the gracious host. His voice 
is cultured, soft.

DR. LECTER
Good morning.

CUTTING BETWEEN THEM

as Clarice comes a measured distance closer.

CLARICE
Doctor, we have a hard problem in 
psychological profiling. I want to 
ask for your help with a 
questionnaire.

DR. LECTER
"We" being the Behavioral Science 
Unit, at Quantico. You're one of 
Jack Crawford's, I expect.

CLARICE
I am, yes.

DR. LECTER
May I see your credentials?

Clarice is surprised, but fishes her ID card from her bag, 
holds it up for his inspection. He smiles, soothingly.

DR. LECTER
Closer, please... Clo-ser...

She complies each time, trying to hide her fear. Dr. Lecter's 
nostrils lift, as he gently, like an animal, tests the air. 
Then he smiles, glancing at her card.

DR. LECTER
(continuing)
That expires in one week. You're not 
real FBI, are you?

CLARICE
I'm - still in training at the 
Academy.

DR. LECTER
Jack Crawford sent a trainee to me?

CLARICE
We're talking about psychology, 
Doctor, not the Bureau. Can you decide 
for yourself whether or not I'm 
qualified?

DR. LECTER
Mmmmm... That's rather slippery of 
you, Officer Starling. Sit. Please.

She sits in the folding metal desk-chair. He waits politely 
till she's settled, then sits down himself, faces her happily.

DR. LECTER
Now then. What did Miggs say to you?
(she is puzzled)
"Multiple Miggs," in the next cell. 
He hissed at you. What did he say?

CLARICE
He said - "I can smell your cunt."

DR. LECTER
I see. I myself cannot. You use Evyan 
skin cream, and sometimes you wear 
L'Air du Temps, but not today. You 
brought your best bag, though, didn't 
you?

CLARICE
(beat)
Yes.

DR. LECTER
It's much better than your shoes.

CLARICE
Maybe they'll catch up.

DR. LECTER
I have no doubt of it.

CLARICE
(shifting uncomfortably)
Did you do those drawings, Doctor?

DR. LECTER
Yes. That's the Duomo, seen from the 
Belvedere. Do you know Florence?

CLARICE
All that detail, just from memory...?

DR. LECTER
Memory, Officer Starling, is what I 
have instead of view.

A pause, then Clarice takes the questionnaire from her case.

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter, if you'd please consider -

DR. LECTER
No, no, no. You were doing fine, 
you'd been courteous and receptive 
to courtesy, you'd established trust 
with the embarrassing truth about 
Miggs, and now this ham-handed segue 
into your questionnaire. It won't 
do. It's stupid and boring.

CLARICE
I'm only asking you to look at this, 
Doctor. Either you will or you won't.

DR. LECTER
Jack Crawford must be very busy indeed 
if he's recruiting help from the 
student body. Busy hunting that new 
one, Buffalo Bill... Such a naughty 
boy! Did Crawford send you to ask 
for my advice on him?

CLARICE
No, I came because we need -

DR. LECTER
How many women has he used, our Bill?

CLARICE
Five... so far.

DR. LECTER
All flayed...?

CLARICE
Partially, yes. But Doctor, that's 
an active case, I'm not involved. If -

DR. LECTER
Do you know why he's called Buffalo 
Bill? Tell me. The newspapers won't 
say.

CLARICE
I'll tell you if you'll look at this 
form.
(he considers, then 
nods)
It started as a bad joke in Kansas 
City Homicide. They said... this one 
likes to skin his humps.

DR. LECTER
Witless and misleading. Why do you 
think he takes their skins, Officer 
Starling? Thrill me with your wisdom.

CLARICE
It excites him. Most serial killers 
keep some sort of trophies.

DR. LECTER
I didn't.

CLARICE
No. You ate yours.

A tense beat, then a smile from him, at this small boldness.

DR. LECTER
Send that through.

She rolls him the questionnaire, in his sliding food tray. 
He rises, glances at it, turning a page or two disdainfully.

DR. LECTER
Oh, Officer Starling... do you think 
you can dissect me with this blunt 
little tool?

CLARICE
No. I only hoped that your knowledge -

Suddenly he whips the tray back at her, with a metallic CLANG 
that makes her start. His voice remains a pleasant purr.

DR. LECTER
You're sooo ambitious, aren't you...? 
You know what you look like to me, 
with your good bag and your cheap 
shoes? You look like a rube. A well-
scrubbed, hustling rube with a little, 
taste... Good nutrition has given 
you some length of bone, but you're 
not more than one generation from 
poor white trash, are you Officer 
Starling...? That accent you're trying 
so desperately to shed - pure West 
Virginia. What was your father, dear? 
Was he a coal miner? Did he stink of 
the lamp...? And oh, how quickly the 
boys found you! All those tedious, 
sticky fumblings, in the back seats 
of cars, while you could only dream 
of getting out. Getting anywhere -
yes? Getting all the way - to the 
F...B...I.

His every word has struck her like a tiny, precise dart. But 
she squares her jaw and won't give ground.

CLARICE
You see a lot, Dr. Lecter. But are 
you strong enough to point that high-
powered perception at yourself? How 
about it...? Look at yourself and 
write down the truth.
(she slams the tray 
back at him)
Or maybe you're afraid to.

DR. LECTER
You're a tough one, aren't you?

CLARICE
Reasonably so. Yes.

DR. LECTER
And you'd hate to think you were 
common. My, wouldn't that sting! 
Well you're far from common, Officer 
Starling. All you have is the fear 
of it.
(beat)
Now please excuse me. Good day.

CLARICE
And the questionnaire...?

DR. LECTER
A census taker once tried to test 
me. I ate his liver with some fava 
beans and a nice chianti... Fly back 
to school, little Starling.

He steps backwards, then returns to his cot, becoming as 
still and remote as a statue. Frustrated, Clarice hesitates, 
then finally shoulders her bag and goes, leaving the 
questionnaire in his tray. But after just a few steps, as 
she passes -

MIGG'S CELL

She sees that creature at his bars again, hissing at her.

MIGGS
I b-bit my wrist so I c-can diiiieeee! 
S-ee how it bleeeeeeeeds?

The dark figure suddenly flings his palm towards her, and -

CLARICE

is spattered on the face and neck - not with blood, but with 
pale droplets of semen. She gives a little cry, touching her 
fingers to the wetness. Stunned, near tears, she forces 
herself to straighten up and walk on, fumbling for a tissue. 
From behind her, Dr. Lecter calls out, very agitated.

DR. LECTER (O.S.)
Officer Starling... Officer Starling!

Clarice slows, stops. She shudders, but makes the very 
difficult choice to turn, walk back, stand again in front of -

DR. LECTER

Who's shivering with rage. For an instant his face opens, 
and we catch a glimpse into hell itself. Then he's composed 
again.

DR. LECTER
I would not have had that happen to 
you. Discourtesy is - unspeakably 
ugly to me.

CLARICE
Then please - do this test for me.

DR. LECTER
No. But I will make you happy... 
I'll give you a chance for what you 
love most, Clarice Starling.

CLARICE
What's that, Dr. Lecter?

DR. LECTER
Advancement, of course.
(beat)
Go to Split City. See Miss Mofet, an 
old patient of mine. M-O-F-E-T... 
Now go. Go.
(a smile)
I don't think Miggs could manage 
again so soon, even if he is crazy - 
do you?

CUT TO:

EXT. THE HOSPITAL - PARKING LOT - DAY

The grim gothic pile of the asylum looms overhead as Clarice 
rushes out the front doors. She is badly shaken, almost 
stumbling, as she rubs at her face. She looks around for, 
and finally, with some relief, spots -

HER CAR

an old Pinto, parked nearby. This image begins to BLUR...

CLOSE ON

her face, fighting tears, as the CAMERA begins to WHIRL AROUND 
her, almost dizzily. She is seeing, in her mind's eye -

IN FLASHBACK

a screen door banging open, on a wooden porch, and a 10-year 
old girl - the young Clarice - rushing outside, down the 
front steps, and running joyfully across her front yard to -

MOVING ANGLE - THE GIRL'S POV

a car - late 60's vintage - parked in the dirt road. A MAN, 
Clarice's father, is just climbing out. He's tall, handsome, 
and has a marshal's badge pinned on his dark suit. He grins, 
seeing her, and spreads his arms wide as...

THE YOUNG CLARICE

rushes into them, and he sweeps her up in a hug, spinning 
her around, the CAMERA SPINNING with them, and capturing 
both their laughing faces, before we abruptly return to -

THE ADULT CLARICE

alone in the parking lot, sagging against her car. Her face 
is buried in her arms, she shoulders shaking. SOUND UPCUT - 
a steady, rapid series of GUNSHOTS, as we

CUT TO:

INT. FBI ACADEMY FIRING RANGE - DAY

Clarice, in a combat stance, and wearing a sound-muffling 
headset, is squeezing off ROUND after ROUND at

A MOVING TARGET

The silhouette of a man, approaching along a track. Her shots, 
tightly grouped, are all finding the center chest. The target 
stops, quite close to her, still swaying.

Clarice stares at it, deftly working her speedloader. Then 
she puts a final, emphatic shot right through THE FIGURE'S 
FOREHEAD.

CUT TO:

INT. FBI ACADEMY LIBRARY - NIGHT

CLOSE ON a microfilm monitor - a grainy newsphoto of Dr. 
Lecter, scrawling past, with an accompanying story ("New 
Horrors in Cannibal Trial"), dated 1980.

Clarice is punching keys on the terminal. Other trainees 
study at nearby tables.

She pauses, jotting a note on her pad, as Ardelia comes by, 
carrying an armful of books.

ARDELIA
Phone call, Clarice. It's God.

CLARICE
Thanks, Ardelia.

MOVING ANGLE

as Clarice rises, grabbing her notebook, and follows Ardelia 
past high metal bookstacks.

ARDELIA
You missed Fourth Amendment law. 
Unlawful seizure, real juicy stuff. 
Where were you all afternoon?

CLARICE
Pleading with a crazy man, with come 
all over my face.

Ardelia stares at her, figures it's a put-on, laughs.

ARDELIA
Damn. Wish I had time for a social 
life.

Clarice grins, as Ardelia indicates a phone receiver resting 
on the check-out desk, then moves on. Clarice picks it up.

CLARICE
(on phone)
Mr. Crawford?

CUT TO:

INT. CRAWFORD'S HOUSE - STUDY - NIGHT

Crawford, in a cardigan, sits in a wing chair in the book- 
lined study of his suburban home. He turns the pages of 
Clarice's memo as they talk. His tone is sharp.

CRAWFORD
I've read your interim memo on Lecter. 
You sure you've left nothing out?

INTERCUTTING

CLARICE
It's all there, sir, practically 
verbatim.

CRAWFORD
Every word, Starling? Every gesture?

CLARICE
(a bit heatedly)
Right down to the kleenex I used.
(he is silent)
Sir, why? Is something wrong?

CRAWFORD
He mentioned a name, at the very 
end. "Mofet..." Any followup on her?

CLARICE
I spent all evening on the mainframe. 
Lecter altered or destroyed most of 
his patient histories, prior to 
capture. No record of anyone named 
Mofet. But "Split City" sounded like 
it might have have something to do 
with divorce. I tracked it down in 
the library's catalogue of national 
yellow pages.
(glancing at her notes)
It's a mini-storage facility outside 
Baltimore, where Lecter had his 
practice.

She pauses, expecting some soft of approval for her 
cleverness.

CRAWFORD
Well? Why aren't you there right 
now?

CLARICE
Sir, that's a field job. It's outside 
the scope of my assignment. And I've
got a test tomorrow on -

CRAWFORD
Do you recall my instructions to 
you, Starling? What were they?

CLARICE
To complete and file my report by 
0800 Wednesday. But sir -

CRAWFORD
Then do that, Starling. Do just 
exactly that.

CLARICE
Sir, what is it? There's something 
you're not telling me.

CRAWFORD
(beat)
Miggs has been murdered.

CLARICE
(startled, upset)
Murdered...? How?

CRAWFORD
The orderly heard Lecter whispering 
to him, all afternoon, and Miggs 
crying. They found him at bed check. 
He'd swallowed his own tongue... 
Chilton is scared stiff the family 
will file a civil rights lawsuit, 
and he's trying to blame it on you. 
I told the little prick your conduct 
was flawless.
(beat)
Starling...?

CLARICE
I'm here, sir, I just - I don't know 
how to feel about it.

CRAWFORD
You don't have to feel any way about 
it. Lecter did it to amuse himself. 
Why not, what can they do? Take away 
his books for awhile, and no jello...
(a bit softer)
I know it got ugly today. But this 
is your report, Starling - take it 
as far as you can. On your own time, 
outside of class. Now carry on.

ANGLE ON CLARICE

as we hear the loud CLICK of Crawford hanging up. She stares 
at her receiver, stung by his abruptness.

CLARICE
Well God damn it! You old creep. 
Creepo son of a bitch. Let Miggs 
squirt you and see how you like it.

She slams her receiver into its cradle.

ANGLE ON CRAWFORD

as he flips aside her memo, then rises, wearily. He leaves 
his study, flicking off the lamp, and pads away in his 
slippers.

CUT TO:

INT. CRAWFORD'S BEDROOM - NIGHT

A private nurse, in white, stands marking a clipboard chart, 
as Crawford enters his tidy bedroom.

CRAWFORD
I'll take over, Patricia. You get 
some rest.

The nurse nods, hands him the chart, and goes. He glances at 
it, then sets it aside. He crosses to -

BELLA CRAWFORD

who lies in an elevated hospital bed. Nearby are an oxygen 
tank and mask, floral arrangements. Her breathing is shallow, 
very labored. Crawford looks down at his comatose wife for a 
long moment, tenderly brushes a strand of her hair back into 
place, then bends over to kiss her forehead. SOUND UPCUT - 
THUNDER and RAIN...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. "SPLIT CITY MINI-STORAGE" - DUSK (RAINING)

An orange neon sign, streaked with rain, identifies out 
location. It looms over a hurricane fence, topped with barbed 
wire. Inside, row on row of garage-sized, cinderblock sheds.

MR. YOW (V.O.)
Unit 31 was leased for ten years. 
Pre-paid in full... The contract is 
in the name of "Miss Hester Mofet."

CUT TO:

EXT. STORAGE UNIT NUMBER 31 - DUSK

Clarice, kneeling before a closed, roll-up metal door, takes 
a FLASH photo of its sealed padlock. EVERETT YOW, a fat, 
60ish Chinaman, holds an umbrella over them both. He looks 
unhappy.

CLARICE
So no one's been in here since - 
1980?

She opens the padlock, using a fat ring of tagged keys, then 
sets aside both keys and lock.

MR. YOW
Not to my knowledge. Privacy is a 
great concern to my customers. But, 
if you say this is an FBI matter...

CLARICE
I won't disturb anything, Mr. Yow, I 
promise. Be gone before you know it.

Slinging her camera over a shoulder, she tugs at the handle, 
but the door won't budge. Another tug, harder - no good. Mr. 
Yow stoops to help, puffing hard, but it's firmly stuck. He 
sighs.

MR. YOW
We could return tomorrow, with my 
son. Or perhaps some workmen...?

Clarice crosses to her Pinto, which faces the shed, reaches 
in to turn on her headlights. Mr. Yow blinks in the sudden 
brightness. Then she opens her truck, rummaging inside, and 
returns with a bumper jack, a flashlight, and a rubber floor 
mat.

CLARICE
Would you hold these, please?

She gives him her flashlight and camera, drops the mat on 
the ground, then sets the bumper jack in place, under the 
center of the door. She pumps on the jack handle as the door 
SQUEALS slowly up, but it won't go higher than about 18 
inches, despite all her exertions. She spreads out the rubber 
mat on the cement, takes the flashlight from Mr. Yow, then 
lies on the mat.

CUT TO:

INT. THE STORAGE SHED - DUSK (VERY DARK)

Clarice, backlit, peers under the door. She reaches in, makes 
a sweep with her flashlight. We catch shadowy outlines - 
boxes, then the flattened tires of a car...

SOUND of rain on the tin roof, and other noises, too - small 
RUSTLINGS. Mr. Yow's chubby face appears down beside 
Clarice's.

MR. YOW
It smells like mice... I think I 
hear them, too - don't you?

Clarice turns onto her back, starts squirming under the door.

MR. YOW
You're going in there?

CUT BACK TO:

EXT. STORAGE UNIT NUMBER 31 - DUSK

Clarice pulls her head back out again, reaching to take her 
camera from him. She hands him a card, trying to appear 
nonchalant.

CLARICE
Mr. Yow, if this door should fall
down -ha ha! - or anything else - 
would you be kind enough to call 
this number? It's our Baltimore field 
office. They know you're here with 
me... Do you understand?

MR. YOW
Might I suggest tucking your pants 
into your socks? To prevent mouse 
intrusion.

CLARICE
(beat)
Good idea.

CUT BACK TO:

INT. STORAGE SHED - DUSK (VERY DARK)

Clarice squirms, on her back, through the narrow opening. As 
she squeezes all the way in, she snags one thigh on the metal 
edge of the door. She curses softly, shining her flashlight 
on her ripped khakis - there's a small streak of blood.

MR. YOW (O.S.)
Okay, Miss Starling?

CLARICE
Okay, Mr. Yow...

She shines her light around. In its narrow beam, we see -

CLARICE'S POV - UPWARD, SHIFTING

spiderwebs, everywhere... high stacks of cardboard boxes... 
a few dusty pieces of furniture... the big car, oddly long 
and tall, covered with a tarp... Suddenly there's a scurrying 
of loud MUSICAL NOTES. Clarice turns, scared, her beam 
capturing... an old upright piano.

MR. YOW (O.S.)
You're playing a piano, Miss Starling?

CLARICE
That wasn't me.

MR. YOW (O.S.)
Oh.

Clarice crawls a bit further. There's hardly room to stand, 
but she finally manages to wriggle upright, clawing away 
cobwebs, next to the car. Holding her light under one arm, 
she takes several FLASH photos of the shed's interior, ending 
with the car. Then, slinging her camera over the shoulder, 
she folds back the tarp, resting it on the roof. The resulting 
clouds of dust make her cough.

THE CAR

is an antique beauty, a 1931 Packard. It's very dusty, despite 
the tarp. Curtains close off the back passenger compartment, 
but there's a narrow gap in them. More mousy RUSTLINGS.

CLARICE

peers in through the gap, aiming her flashlight.

HER POV - SHIFTING

as the thin flashlight beam picks out: the broad back seat... 
as open album of lacy, old-fashioned Valentines... a crumpled 
lap rug, on the floor... and then a pair of women's shiny, 
high-heeled pumps... Above these, the hem of a fancy satin 
evening gown - and a pair of pale, stockinged legs.

Clarice recoils, alarmed, then steadies herself.

CLARICE
Mr. Yow? Oh Mr. Yow...? It looks 
like somebody is sitting in this 
car.

MR. YOW (O.S.)
Oh my! Oh my... Maybe you better 
come out now, Miss Starling.

CLARICE
Not yet! - just wait for me.
(under the breath)
Maybe in about two seconds.

She leans down with her camera, takes a FLASH through the 
gap, then tries the door handle. Locked. So is the front 
door. She looks around, aiming her light, and locates a tangle 
of coat-hangers, sticking out of a carton of bric-a-brac. 
She pulls out one of these, straightens it quickly, bends 
the tip into a hook.

CLOSE ANGLE

as she jams this tool inside the join at the top of the back 
passenger window, then fishes around till she can snag the 
inside door latch, pulling up. A satisfying CLICK.

Clarice opens the door - it hits stacked boxes, and won't 
open far - then very cautiously leans inside, aiming her 
flashlight.

HER POV - MOVING LIGHT BEAM

revealing more of the evening gown... a pair of hands, in 
white, elbow-length gloves - one rests on the lap, the other 
atop a large, beaded, drawstring evening bag... thick strands 
of costume pearls over the breasts... and finally the white 
neck stub of a female mannequin. No face or head.

CLARICE

sighs with relief. She takes a couple more FLASHES, then 
very carefully lifts out the Valentine album, holding it by 
the corners, and setting it atop the car. Then she eases 
herself inside, onto the back seat, as the springs SQUEAK 
loudly.

ONE GLOVED HAND slides off the lap, brushing Clarice's thigh. 

Clarice starts a bit, then pokes at the gloved arm, hard. 
She peels back a bit of glove, revealing the white, synthetic 
elbow. She smiles, shaking her head at her own jumpiness, as 
she reaches over the mannequin's lap to loosen the evening 
bag's drawstring.

A SEVERED HUMAN HEAD stares back at her, as the beaded 
material slides away.

Clarice lurches back, gasping loudly, and several long, heart-
pounding moments pass before she can make herself look more 
closely.

The head bobs gently in a pool of alcohol, in a laboratory 
specimen jar. It is a man's head, but grotesquely transformed, 
by the addition of heavy makeup, earrings, and a sodden wig, 
into a woman's face. Over the years the makeup has smeared 
badly, and the pupils have gone almost milky white.

CLARICE

staring at this terrible thing, is pleased to find herself 
quickly regaining control. She murmurs to herself.

CLARICE
Well, Toto, we're not in Kansas 
anymore.

CUT TO:

EXT. QUINN'S HOSPITAL - PARKING LOT - NIGHT (RAINING)

A loud clap of THUNDER, as a flash of LIGHTNING illuminates 
the eerie towers and barred windows of the asylum.

MOVING ANGLE on Clarice as she climbs from her car, runs 
through heavy rain towards the main entrance, where a guard 
admits her.

CUT TO:

INT. DR. LECTER'S CELL AND CORRIDOR - NIGHT (DIM LIGHT)

On a noiseless TV screen, an evangelist rants, waving his 
arms. Behind him, a swaying choir in gaudy robes.

CLARICE (O.S.)
It's an anagram, isn't it, Doctor?

PAN TO Clarice, with her wet hair plastered flat, sitting on 
the corridor floor to one side of this TV, which has been 
stationed so that Dr. Lecter cannot avoid seeing it.

CLARICE
Hester Mofet... "The rest of me." 
Miss The-Rest-of-Me... Meaning, you 
rented that place.

HER POV

he's lost in shadows; we can't see him. He doesn't respond.

CUTTING BETWEEN THEM

Clarice and the darkened call - as she tries again.

CLARICE
You put those - things in there. 
Paid for it in advance, ten years 
ago... Why, Dr. Lecter?

The food carrier suddenly SWISHES out of the cell, making 
her jump up. In its tray is a clean, folded white towel. She 
hesitates, then crosses, takes this.

CLARICE
Thank you.

She sits again, rubbing her wet hair. When he finally speaks, 
he's on the floor, too - a deeper, hunching darkness in the 
shadows, occasionally striped by the flickering TV light.

DR. LECTER
Your bleeding has stopped.

CLARICE
How did -
(she stops herself)
It's nothing. A scratch.

DR. LECTER
Why don't you ask me about Buffalo 
Bill?

CLARICE
(surprised, a beat)
Why? Do you know something about 
him?

DR. LECTER
I might if I saw the case file. You 
could get that for me.

CLARICE
Why don't you tell me about "Miss 
Mofet?" You wanted me to find him. 
Or do I have to wait for the lab?

DR. LECTER
(sighs)
His real name is Benjamin Raspail. A 
former patient of mine, whose romantic 
attachments ran to, shall we say, 
the exotic...? I didn't kill him, 
merely tucked him away. Very much as 
I found him, in that ridiculous car, 
in his own garage, after he's missed 
three appointments. You'd have him 
under "Missing Person" - which, in 
poor Raspail's case, could hardly be 
more true.

CLARICE
If you didn't kill him, then who 
did?

DR. LECTER
Who can say...? Best thing for him, 
really. His therapy was going nowhere.

CLARICE
Wouldn't it have been easier to just 
leave him for the police to find?

DR. LECTER
And have them clomping about in my 
life? Oh dear, no... At that time I 
still had certain private amusements 
of my own.
(beat)
How did you feel when you saw him, 
Clarice? May I call you Clarice?

CLARICE
Scared, at first. Then - exhilarated.

DR. LECTER
Ahhh... Why?

CLARICE
Because you weren't wasting my time.

DR. LECTER
Do you have something you use, when 
you need to get up your courage? 
Memories, tableaux... scenes from 
your early life?

CLARICE
I don't know. Next time I'll have to 
check.

DR. LECTER
Jack Crawford is helping your career, 
isn't he? Apparently he likes you. 
And you like him, too.

CLARICE
I never thought about it.

DR. LECTER
Your first lie to me, Clarice. How 
sad. Tell me - do you think Crawford 
wants you, sexually? True, he's much 
older, but - do you think he 
visualizes... scenarios, exchanges...? 
Fucking you?

CLARICE
That doesn't interest me, Doctor. 
And it's the sort of thing Miggs 
would ask.

DR. LECTER
Not anymore.
(beat)
Surely the odd confluence of events 
hasn't escaped you, Clarice. Crawford 
dangles you before me. Then I give 
you a bit of help. Do you think it's 
because I like to look at you, and 
imagine how good you would taste...?

CLARICE
I don't know. Is it?

DR. LECTER
Or doesn't this all begin to suggest 
to you a kind of... negotiation? 
There's something Crawford can give 
me, and I want to trade for it. I 
even wrote to him, offering my help. 
But he hates me, so he won't deal 
directly.

Dr. Lecter slowly turns up the rheostat in his cell. As his 
lights rise, we see that the cell's been stripped bare. Gone 
are his books, drawings, mattress - even his toilet seat. 
She stands, too, startled. They face each other.

DR. LECTER
Punishment, you see. For Miggs. Just 
like that gospel program. When you 
leave, they'll turn the volume way 
up. Chilton does enjoy his petty 
torments.

CLARICE
Who killed Raspail, Doctor...? You 
know, don't you?

DR. LECTER
I've been in this room for eight 
years, Clarice. I know they will 
never, ever let me out while I'm 
alive. What I want is a view. I want 
a window where I can see a tree, or 
even water. I want to be in a federal 
institution, away from Chilton - and 
I want a view. I'll give good value 
for it. Crawford could do that for 
me, but he won't. You persuade him.

CLARICE
(almost a whisper)
Who killed your patient?

DR. LECTER
Oh, a very naughty boy. Someone you 
and Jack Crawford are most anxious 
to meet.

CLARICE
Buffalo Bill...?
(incredulous)
Bill killed him, all those years 
ago...? That's impossible.

But Dr. Lecter only smiles, enigmatically.

DR. LECTER
Who is he stalking right now, Clarice? 
I wonder, don't you? How many more 
young women will have to die, before 
you trade with me...?

As Clarice stares at him, unsure how to respond -

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. CATHERINE MARTIN'S APARTMENT - MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE - 
NIGHT

CATHERINE MARTIN takes a long toke from a bong pipe. She is 
21, a tall, big-boned, rather fleshy girl with long brown 
fair. Her head is on the lap of her boyfriend, CODY; they're 
sprawled on a couch in the den of her well-furnished 
apartment. The TV in on, with low SOUND.

CATHERINE
This stuff's givin' me the munchies. 
Where's that bag of popcorn?

CODY
Shit. Left the groceries in the car.

He starts to rise, but she pushes him back.

CATHERINE
'S okay, I'll go.

She rises, goes out the front door.

CUT TO:

EXT. PARKING LOT - THE APARTMENT COMPLEX - NIGHT

Catherine straightens, with her bag of groceries, shutting 
her car's back door. She sees, a short distance away -

A MAN

standing at the open rear door of a brown panel truck. His 
right forearm is in a cast and sling; he is struggling, 
unsuccessfully, to hoist an armchair into the truck. Parked 
nearby, other cars, RVs, a boat on a trailer. A thin, breast-
high fog fills the lot; arc lights make yellow pools. 

Catherine hesitates, then crosses towards the man.

CATHERINE
Help you with that?

MAN
Would you? Thanks.

His voice is odd, strained, very soft. A fog lamp, set on 
end on the ground, distorts his features from below. We can't 
get a good glimpse of his face, but his body is plump, above 
average height; he's in his mid 30's. She sets down the bag, 
then together they easily lift the chair into the truck.

MAN (O.S.)
Let's slide it up, you mind?

CUT TO:

INT. THE PANEL TRUCK - NIGHT

He climbs inside the truck, ducking under a small hand winch, 
and grabs the chair. She hesitates again, but climbs in after 
him; together they slide the chair forward, behind the seats.

MAN
Are you about a size 14?

CATHERINE
(surprised)
What?

Suddenly, in the shadowy dark, he clubs her over the back of 
her head with his cast. She moans, slumps unconscious, sliding 
off the armchair to lie on her stomach. He pulls off his 
cast and sling, tosses them aside, then hops out of the truck, 
grabs his lamp, climbs back inside, and pulls the door shut. 
He bends over her face with the lamp.

We hear her shallow BREATHING.

MAN
Good.

He peels back the collar of her blouse, reading the size 
tag.

MAN
Good.

He carefully slits her blouse up the back, with a pair of 
bandage scissors, peeling apart the two halves. There's no 
bra strap. He strokes her bare skin delicately, very happily.

MAN
Gooood...

CUT TO:

EXT. THE PARKING LOT - NIGHT

LOW ANGLE - CLOSE - on Catherine's grocery bag, as her blouse 
is tossed out beside it. SOUND of the truck's motor starting. 
The truck backs up, one rear wheel knocking over the bag, 
partly squashing it. Then is drives away, taillights 
shrinking, as a lone orange rolls slowly away from the bag...

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. FBI ACADEMY CLASSROOM - QUANTICO - DAY

CLOSE ON a large video screen, where a BLURRY image gradually 
sharpens, resolving into two separate pieces of fabric.

INSTRUCTOR (O.S.)
Electron microscopy reveals fiber 
"signatures" that are nearly as 
distinct as fingerprints...

Clarice sits at a long table, with other trainees. Ardelia 
is beside her. Other tables and students in the background. 
Each trainee has his own microscope. Clarice is tired, but 
straightens, hearing -

INSTRUCTOR (O.S.)
Both of these blouses were worn by 
victims of Buffalo Bill. They were 
found in two different states, and 
four months apart. He always slits 
them up the back, like a funeral 
suit...

ON THE SCREEN

successively CLOSER VIEWS of the cut fabric edges, until we 
are seeing individual threads, big as tree limbs. The cuts 
match.

INSTRUCTOR (O.S.)
The bunching you see - this 
compression - is characteristic of 
scissor cuts, rather than a single 
blade. And, as you see - Bill always 
uses the same pair...

ANGLE ON THE DOOR

as John Brigham, the gunnery instructor, sticks his head in.

BRIGHAM
Clarice Starling! Are you in here?

CUT TO:

INT. HALLWAY - CLASSROOM BUILDING - DAY

Clarice and Brigham walk briskly down the hall, passing other 
trainees. He carries a small canvas bag.

BRIGHAM
Get your field gear, take stuff for 
overnight. You're goin' with Crawford.

CLARICE
Where?

BRIGHAM
Some fishermen in West Virginia found 
an unidentified girl's body. It's a 
Buffalo Bill-type situation. Been in 
the water about a week, and Jack 
needs somebody that can print a 
floater. Think you can handle it?

CLARICE
(thinking quickly)
I'll need the big fingerprint kit... 
and the one-to-one Polaroid, the CU-
5, with film packs and batteries.

CUT TO:

INT. BRIGHAM'S JEEP CHEROKEE - DAY (DRIVING)

Brigham steers as they pass hangars, parked planes, an 
airstrip. Clarice holds a big fingerprint kit and a weekend 
bag.

BRIGHAM
Jack's pretty tough on you, isn't 
he? Impatient...

CLARICE
Sometimes.

BRIGHAM
He's got a lot on his mind besides 
Buffalo Bill... His wife, Bella, is 
real sick. Comatose... I'm tellin' 
you about it now, 'cause he may never.

Clarice absorbs this in silence as they stop near an ancient, 
rather dilapidated Beechcraft. Its door is open, the twin 
props and beacons already turning. Brigham turns to her, 
holding out his small canvas bag.

BRIGHAM
You're goin' in the field, so you 
gotta have full kit. Take this - 
it's my own...

Clarice opens the bag, stares at the big blue gun nestled in 
its shoulder holster. She looks up at him, touched.

BRIGHAM
Wear it, don't ever leave it in your 
purse. Dry fire it whenever you get 
the chance. And do your exercises.

CLARICE
I will... I promise.

BRIGHAM
Listen, I hope you never need a thing 
I've taught you. But you've got 
something... Jack sees it, I do too. 
If you ever need to, you can shoot.

She nods, climbs out. Then she looks back in at him. They're 
both moved by this rite of passage, but a little embarrassed.

BRIGHAM
Bless you, Starling...

CUT TO:

INT. BEECHCRAFT PLANE - DAY (FLYING)

CLARICE'S POV - Out the plane's window, at the landscape far 
below. Wisps of cloud, a quilt of farms.

Clarice turns from the window, looks at a think folder in 
her lap. The cover reads "Case File: / BUFFALO BILL." Clarice 
is moody, distracted. She hesitates, then opens the file, 
begins to scan.

INSERTS - HER POV

Police forms, some handwritten... Typed lab reports; we catch 
words, phrases: "Autopsy Protocols", "Histamine Analysis"... 
Grainy enlargements of bullet slugs, showing matched 
grooves... And then a stack of victim photos. The first one, 
taken from a good distance away, shows a nude female body, 
face down on a pebbly riverbank, surrounded by bits of litter.

Clarice hesitates again, then flips this photo to look at 
the next. It makes her flinch, just slightly. Quickly she 
turns through several more photographs, trying hard to 
concentrate.

CRAWFORD (O.S.)
He keeps them alive for three days.

NEW ANGLE

shows Crawford standing over her, swaying with the plane's 
motion. Behind him, the open cockpit door, the pilot's back. 
Crawford sits, removing sunglasses. He rubs his eyes.

CRAWFORD
Why, we don't yet know... There's no 
evidence of rape or physical abuse 
prior to death. All the mutilation 
you see there is post-mortem.
(a beat; he glances 
at her)
I'm hot, are you hot? Bobby, it's 
too damned hot back here...

The pilot adjusts a valve. Crawford turns to her again.

CRAWFORD
So. Three days. Then he shoots them,
skins them - usually just the torsos - 
and dumps them. Each body in a 
different river, in a different state, 
downstream from an interstate highway. 
The water leaves us no fingerprints, 
fibers, DNA fluids - no trace evidence 
at all. That's Fredrica Bimmel, the 
first one...

A COLOR PHOTO - IN CLARICE'S HANDS

shows a pretty, plump-cheeked brunette, in her high school 
graduation cap and gown. She smiles at us with touching 
optimism.

CRAWFORD (O.S.)
A big girl, like all the rest. Went 
about 160... Her corpse was the only 
one he took the trouble to weight 
down, so actually, she was the third 
girl found. After her, he got lazy...

NEW ANGLE

as Clarice stares at the girl's face, moved. Crawford pulls 
a map from the file, spreads it out. It shows the central 
and eastern U.S., with widely-spaced, hand-drawn markings.

CRAWFORD
Blue square for Belvedere, Ohio, 
where the Bimmel girl was abducted. 
Blue triangle where her body was 
found - down here in Missouri. Same 
marks for the other four girls, in 
different colors. This new one, 
today... washed up here.
(he marks with a Flair 
pen)
Elk River, in West Virginia, about 
six miles below U.S. 79. Real boonies.

CLARICE
There's no correlation at all between 
where they're kidnapped and where 
they're found...?
(he shakes his head)
What if - what if you trace the 
heaviest-traffic routes backwards 
from the dump sites? Do they converge 
at all?

CRAWFORD
Good idea, but he thought of it, 
too. We've run simulations, using 
different vectors and the best dates 
we can assign. You put it all in the 
computer, and smoke comes out. No, 
this one is different. This one has 
seen us coming...

CUT TO:

INT. RENTAL CAR - DAY (DRIVING)

Crawford steers, following a highway patrol car along a 
winding mountain road. Clarice has the file open on her lap. 
He glances at her, inscrutable behind his sunglasses.

CRAWFORD
Talk about him, Starling. Tell me 
what you see.

CLARICE
(choosing her words 
carefully)
He's a white male... Serial killers 
tend to hunt within their own ethnic 
group. And he's not a drifter - he's 
got his own house, somewhere. Not an 
apartment.

CRAWFORD
Why?

CLARICE
What he does with them - takes 
privacy... Time, tools... He's in 
his 30's or 40's - he's got real 
physical strength, but combined with 
an older man's self-control. He's 
cautious, precise, never impulsive... 
This won't end in suicide, like they 
often do.

CRAWFORD
Why not?

CLARICE
He's got a real taste for it now. 
And he's getting better at his work.

CRAWFORD
(a beat; impressed)
Maybe you've got a knack for this... 
I guess we're about to find out.

CLARICE
(quietly, evenly)
Like I have a "knack" for Dr. Lecter?

He studies her a few moments, measuring her anger.

CRAWFORD
Okay, Starling. Let's have it.

CLARICE
You haven't said a word today about 
that garage. Or what I found there.

CRAWFORD
What should I say? You did fine work. 
We'll wait on the lab.

CLARICE
You knew. You knew from the start 
that Lecter held the key to this... 
But you weren't up front with me. 
You sent me in to him naked.

CRAWFORD
(beat)
Are you finished?

CLARICE
He starts this - buzzing in me, in 
my head. He makes me feel violated... 
You used me, Mr. Crawford.

A shadow of regret passes over his face, but he answers 
sternly.

CRAWFORD
Number One. Maybe there's a 
connection, maybe not. Lying and 
breathing are the same thing to 
Lecter. Number Two. If I'd sent you 
in there with something to hide from 
him, he'd have known it, instantly. 
He'd never have trusted you.

She starts to answer, then is silent. He is right.

By now the two cars are entering a tidy little town - tree-
lined streets, wooden houses, one-story shops, mountains in 
the background. They slow, turn.

CRAWFORD
Number Three, I didn't bring you 
along today just because you can do 
first-rate forensics. If Lecter is 
becoming part of this case, you've 
got the most current read on him. 
And Number Four - you don't have to 
like me, or the way I do things. But 
you do have to keep a cool head. 
Especially now... Because from here 
on out, you'll know everything I do. 
Are we straight on that?

Clarice nods, silently; it's as close to an apology as she's 
likely to get. She stares out the windshield.

JUST AHEAD OF THEM

the highway patrol cruiser noses into a curb, next to other 
police cars, facing a big white frame house. Its sign reads 
"Potter Funeral Home." Two troopers climb from the car.

Crawford parks too, then kills the engine. He turns to her, 
removing his sunglasses, gestures to the case file.

CRAWFORD
(softly)
You think about him long enough, you 
get a feel for him... Then, if you're 
lucky, out of all the stuff you know, 
one little part of it tugs at you, 
tries to get your attention... You 
let me know when that happens, 
Starling. Live right behind your 
eyes, today. Don't try to impose any 
patterns on this guy. Just stay open 
and let him show you...

One of the troopers, impassive in his sunglasses and hat, 
peers in through Crawford's window. Crawford nods to him, 
then turns back to Clarice.

CRAWFORD
School's out, Starling.

CUT TO:

EXT. SIDEWALK OF THE FUNERAL HOME - POTTER, WEST VA. - DAY

SOUND of organ music, as Clarice, carrying her fingerprint 
kit, mounts some steps to the sidewalk. She stops, seeing -

COUNTRY PEOPLE

in their somber best, filing into the mortuary for a service. 
The music - "Shall We Gather At The River?" - is issuing 
from the open double doors. Several of the mourners glance 
over at her curiously.

ANGLE ON CLARICE

staring back at the mourners, hearing the music, as a sense 
memory is triggered in her...

IN FLASHBACK - LOW ANGLE, MOVING

as we approach, down the aisle of a country chapel, an open 
wooden coffin. Sad country faces turn, looking at us from 
the flanking pews. The b.g. organ hymn is "Shall We 
Gather...?"

THE SAD, 10 YEAR-OLD CLARICE

in her best dress, is reluctantly approaching the casket. 
Her hands are held by the plump hands of unseen matrons.

CHILD'S POV

on the looming coffin... closer and closer... until finally 
she can see, lying inside it... her dead father, arms folded, 
his marshal's badge still pinned to his lapel.

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Starling...?

NEW ANGLE (PRESENT DAY)

as the grownup Clarice turns towards the impatient Crawford. 
Like her, he carries a large case.

CRAWFORD
We're around back.

CUT TO:

INT. FUNERAL HOME - BACK CORRIDOR - DAY

A young deputy, several state troopers, and a SHERIFF are 
all waiting, as Crawford and Clarice enter. The dim, cluttered 
corridor doubles as storage space - there's a treadle sewing 
machine, a soft-drink machine, a tricycle. The MUSIC is 
closer. Crawford shakes hands with the sheriff.

CRAWFORD
Sheriff Perkins? Jack Crawford, FBI... 
This is Officer Starling. We 
appreciate your phoning us.

SHERIFF
(grim, unsociable)
I didn't call you. That was somebody 
from the state attorney's office... 
'For you do a thing else, I'm gon' 
find out if this girl's local. It 
could just be somethin' that outside 
elements has dumped on us.

He casts a sidelong, unhappy glance at Clarice.

CRAWFORD
Well sir, that's where we can help. 
If -

SHERIFF
I don't even know you, Mister... Now 
we'll extend you ever courtesy, just
soon as we can, but for right now -

CRAWFORD
Sheriff, this, ah - this type of sex 
crime has some aspects I'd rather 
discuss just between the two of us. 
Know what I mean?

He indicates Clarice with his eyes. The sheriff hesitates, 
nods, then lets Crawford guide him into a small office, 
closing the door behind them. Muffled WORDS from there.

CLARICE

burning at this slight, is left alone with the troopers, who 
peek at her with shy curiosity. She pulls her blazer a bit 
tighter, self-conscious about her bulging shoulder holster.

ANGLE ON THE OFFICE DOOR

as, after a few more moments, the sheriff and Crawford emerge. 
The sheriff, still not very happy, addresses his deputy.

SHERIFF
Oscar, run fetch Dr. Akin from the 
chapel. And tell Lamar to come on 
when he's done playin' that music.

CUT TO:

INT. EMBALMING ROOM - DAY

Crawford, in one corner of the room, has set up a Litton 
Policefax fingerprint transmitter. SOUND of many men's low 
voices, in background. He is on the phone, and has to speak 
loudly.

CRAWFORD
I need a six-way linkup! Chicago, 
Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, 
Atlanta, and Dallas... What?... Can 
you hear me...?

He looks around, frustrated by the noisy circus atmosphere.

CLARICE

is pulling on a pair of surgical gloves. She raises her voice, 
turning up her natural accent by several notches.

CLARICE
Gentlemen. You officers and gentlemen! 
Listen here a minute, please. There's 
things I need to do for her...

WIDER ANGLE

as we see that the small room is very crowded with deputies 
and troopers. They gradually fall silent, looking at her.

CLARICE (O.S.)
Y'all brought her this far, and I 
know her folks would thank you if 
they could. Now please - go on out 
and let me take care of her... Go 
on, now.

The men look at one another, a little bashfully, then begin 
to to file out, whispering among themselves. As they go, a 
bright green body bag is REVEALED, tightly zipped, lying on 
a porcelain embalming table. It is almost the only modern 
object in this Victorian room, with its glass-paned cabinets 
and faded wallpaper, decorated with cabbage roses.

FAVORING CRAWFORD

as he looks at Clarice with a new degree of respect. Men 
brush by him, till finally only two are left: DR. AKIN, a 
family g.p., and LAMAR, a lean, whiskey-reddened mortician. 
SOUND of the door closing. Lamar dabs around his nostrils 
with Vicks VapoRub.

CRAWFORD
(on phone)
We're starting. Tell everybody to 
stand by for fingerprint transmission.

CLARICE

at a side counter, has turned back to her open fingerprint 
kit. She is lifting out a camera when she hears the ZIPPER 
of the body bag being slowly opened, behind her...

One gloved hand flies to her mouth as she reacts, 
involuntarily, to the sudden smell. She blinks at her 
reflection in the cabinet glass, then steels herself to turn, 
look at the corpse.

CLARICE
(pause; softly)
Bill...

She steadies herself by raising her camera, takes a FLASH 
photo.

LOW ANGLE - LOOKING UP, FROM BENEATH TABLE

as Dr. Akin gently lifts aside one of the dead girl's arms. 
A piece of fishing line, with multiple hooks, is still snagged 
around it, dangling. Crawford leans in for a closer look.

DR. AKIN
Wrongful death... She'll have to go 
to the state pathologist at Claxton 
when you're done.
(Crawford nods)
I better - get on back for the rest 
of that service. Lamar'll help you.
(shaken)
Lord almighty...

He leaves, and Clarice leans INTO SHOT, taking another photo.

CRAWFORD
What do you see, Starling?

CLARICE
Well, she's not local. Her ears are 
pierced three times each, and she's 
wearing green glitter nail polish. 
Looks like town to me...

CLOSE ANGLE

on the calf of one of the girl's legs, as Clarice trails the 
inside of her bare wrist along the skin.

CLARICE (O.S.)
She waxed her legs, I think... A big 
girl, just like the others - but she 
was careful about her appearance...

UPWARD ANGLE AGAIN

as Lamar joins them for a closer look.

CLARICE
Two of the fingernails are broken 
off, and there's - dirt or grit under 
the others. She tried to claw her 
way through something... I'll scrape 
out samples after I've printed her.

She takes another FLASH, then quickly reloads film.

LAMAR
Them fishhooks are set too close 
together. No wonder the Franklin 
boys was scared to say they found 
her.

CLARICE
Think they were runnin' a trotline?

Crawford and Lamar both look at her curiously.

CLARICE
(to Crawford)
It's a Fish and Game violation. Like 
poaching. There's a big fine.

LAMAR
Right... Are you from around here?

CLARICE
They do it lots of places.

CRAWFORD
Get photos of her teeth. Then we'll 
fax her fingerprints to Washington, 
try to trace her through Missing 
Persons.

SIDE ANGLE - CLOSE ON THE DEAD GIRL'S FACE

staring blue eyes, short reddish hair. Clarice sets the 
Polaroid, with its special attachments, against the face, 
while Lamar gently retracts the lips. Each time the camera 
FLASHES, there's a bright glow inside the cheeks.

NEW ANGLE - CHEST HIGH

as Clarice examines a developing print.

CLARICE
She's got something in her throat.

She hands the print to Crawford; he and Lamar look at it, as 
she searches in her kit.

LAMAR
When a body comes out of the water, 
alots of times there's like, leaves 
and things in the mouth.

Clarice holds up a pair of forceps. She glances at Crawford, 
who nods. She bends over, partially OUT OF SHOT, and after a 
few moments reappears, holding up a small, brown cylindrical 
object. She turns this in the air, as they all stare.

CRAWFORD
What is it - some kind of seed pod?

LAMAR
Nawsir, that's a bug cocoon. But how 
come that to get way down in there? 
'Less somebody shoved it in...

Clarice and Crawford exchange a glance.

CRAWFORD
She'll be easier to print if we turn 
her over. Lamar, will you give me a 
hand?

LAMAR
Yessir, I will. Clarice takes a jar 
from her kit, carefully drops the 
cocoon inside.

SOUND of the men's heavy efforts as they turn over the body, 
off screen. She seals the jar, staring into it at the cocoon.

CRAWFORD (O.S.)
Starling - what do you make of these?

She turns to look.

HER POV

low on the corpse's back, over the shoulders, two neat, 
triangular patches of skin are missing.

NEW ANGLE - TWO SHOT

as Clarice looks at Crawford.

CLARICE
I don't know. I didn't see those on 
any of the other girls...

CRAWFORD
They weren't there. Get close-ups.

Clarice raises her camera, leans in for another FLASH.

CUT TO:

EXT. BACK STEPS OF THE FUNERAL HOME - DAY

Clarice sits outside, with her head on her knees, drained. 
She looks up wanly as Lamar appears, offers her a can of 
Coke.

CLARICE
Thanks, I'm not thirsty.

LAMAR
No, hold it under your chin, there, 
and on your temples. Cold'll make 
you feel better. It does me.

She smiles, touched, and takes the can. When Lamar sees 
Crawford coming outside, he tactfully departs. Crawford sits 
beside her; there's a brief silence. She soothes herself 
with the can.

CRAWFORD
When I told that sheriff we shouldn't 
talk in front of a woman, that really 
burned you, didn't it?
(she is silent)
That was just smoke, Starling, I had 
to get rid of him. You did well in 
there.

CLARICE
It matters, Mr. Crawford... Other 
cops know who you are. They look at 
you to see how to act... It matters.

CRAWFORD
(beat)
Point taken.

She looks at him a moment, then offers the can. He opens it.

CRAWFORD
When we get back, I want you to run 
that bug by the Smithsonian, see if 
they can identify it. Maybe it's got 
some limited range, or it only breeds 
at certain times of year... You found 
it, Starling, you deserve the credit.

CLARICE
I'm wondering if he's done that before - 
placed a cocoon, or an insect. It 
would be easy to miss in an autopsy, 
especially with a floater... Can we 
check back on that?

CRAWFORD
(shakes his head)
The other girls are in the ground. 
Exhumations are upsetting for the 
families. I'll do it if I have to,
but -

CLARICE
Then have the lab check Raspail's 
head.
(he looks at her)
Dr. Lecter's patient - have them 
probe his soft-palette tissues... 
They'll find another cocoon.

CRAWFORD
You seem pretty sure of that.

CLARICE
Raspail was killed by the same man 
who's killing these girls. And Lecter 
knows him. Maybe even treated him... 
You think so, too, don't you? Or 
you'd never have sent me to that 
asylum.

He looks at her for a moment, then sips again.

CRAWFORD
Before we caught him, Lecter had a 
big psychiatric practice in Baltimore. 
But he traveled all over the country - 
teaching, consulting... Christ, even 
testifying in murder trials. Who 
knows how many potential psychos he 
turned loose, just for the fun of 
it...?

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (DIM LIGHT)

A shadowy male figure looks down at us, leaning over the 
edge of a deep hole. He holds a little white poodle in his 
arms, stroking it. This is MR. GUMB, aka "Buffalo Bill."

MR. GUMB
(softly)
Rub the cream on your skin. Rub it 
in gooood...

CATHERINE MARTIN

looks up at him. She is standing on the cement bottom of the 
pit, or oubliette, about 15 feet below floor level. The pit 
is bare, except for a futon and a plastic toilet bucket, 
from which a thin string rises up to the basement. She's 
soaking wet, in an orange jumpsuit, and holds a squeeze bottle 
of skin lotion. She struggles to sound calm.

CATHERINE
Mister... my family will pay cash. 
Whatever ransom you're askin' for,
they -

REVERSE ANGLE - UP TOWARDS MR. GUMB

MR. GUMB
Rub it in! Or you'll get the hose 
again.

The little dog squirms in his arms, BARKING excitedly.

MR. GUMB
Yes, it will, Precious, won't it? It 
will get the hose!

SIDE ANGLE - AT PIT BOTTOM

as Catherine kneels, turning slightly away from him.

CATHERINE
(under her breath)
Oh God... oh God...

She unzips her jumpsuit, part-way, then squeezes some of the 
lotion onto a palm. She reaches inside her suit, rubs it on.

CATHERINE
Mister, if you let me go, I won't 
press charges, I promise. You've 
only had me here a couple days, and -

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
No. Just one day...

CATHERINE
Is that all...? See - see, my mom is 
a real important woman... Well, I 
guess you already know that. She'll 
pay you, no questions asked. Whatever 
cause you represent - Iran, Palestine - 
she'll see that -

A sudden blinding glare of light silences her. She looks up, 
shielding her eyes.

HER POV

a floodlamp is descending, attached to a small basket.

MR. GUMB
Put the bottle in the basket. No 
funny business, or you'll be sorry...

NEW ANGLE - CATHERINE

as the basket stops, and she steadies it. But as she slips 
the bottle in, she sees something, O.S., just at the fringe 
of the light. She hesitates, looks closer... then begins to 
scream, hysterically, again and again. Her outflung hand 
hits the lamp, and in its swaying glare, we see - high on 
the concrete walls, all around her -

BLOODY FINGER TRACKS

dried now, brownish - left by many pairs of frenzied hands...

CUT TO:

INT.CLARICE'S DORM ROOM - FBI ACADEMY - DAWN

Clarice is at her desk, exercising her right hand with the 
grip flexer, while simultaneously studying a thick law book. 
Ardelia sticks her head in the door, excited.

ARDELIA
You better come see this.

CUT TO:

INT. RECREATION ROOM - FBI ACADEMY - DAWN

CLOSE ON a TV screen, filled with a photo of Catherine Martin.

TV ANCHOR (V.O.)
...was listed at first simply as a 
missing person, but is now believed 
to have been kidnapped by the serial 
killer known only as "Buffalo Bill."

The photo disappears, replaced by the TV ANCHOR himself.

TV ANCHOR
Memphis Police sources indicate that 
the missing girl's blouse has been 
identified, sliced up the back, in 
what has become a kind of grim calling 
card. Young Catherine Martin, as 
we've said, is the only daughter of 
U.S. Senator Ruth Martin -

CLARICE

looks at Ardelia, surprised. Other trainees are drifting 
into the rec room, some whispering among themselves. Clarice 
stares back at the TV intently.

TV ANCHOR (O.S.)
...the Republican junior senator 
from Tennessee. And while her 
kidnapping is not at this point 
considered to be politically 
motivated, nevertheless it has stirred 
the government -

BACK ON THE TV ANCHOR

TV ANCHOR
...to its highest levels, the 
president himself being said to be, 
and I quote, "intensely concerned." 
Just moments ago, Senator Martin 
made this dramatic personal plea...

SENATOR MARTIN (TV FOOTAGE)

fills the screen, in a halo of lens flare, as she speaks to 
a jostling crowd of reporters on the front steps of her 
Georgetown home. A tall woman, late 40's, with a strong, 
taut face.

SEN. MARTIN
I'm speaking now to the person who 
is holding my daughter. Her name is 
Catherine... You have the power to 
let Catherine go, unharmed. She's 
very gentle and kind - talk to her 
and you'll see. Her name is 
Catherine...

Clarice is moved by what she sees. Other trainees are all 
around her.

CLARICE
(whispers)
Boy, is that smart...

ARDELIA
Why does she keep repeating the name?

CLARICE
Somebody's coaching her... They're 
trying to make him see Catherine as 
a person - not just an object.

ON THE TV AGAIN

SEN. MARTIN
You have a chance to show the whole 
world that you can be merciful, as
well as strong. Please - I beg you - 
release my Catherine...

NEW FOOTAGE

as we see (NIGHT, TELEPHOTO) - a taped-off section of 
Catherine's parking lot. Technicians, with instruments, are 
kneeling by the crushed grocery bag.

2ND TV ANCHOR (V.O.)
Meanwhile. in Memphis, the 
investigation continued throughout 
the night, as state and local 
authorities were joined at the kidnap 
scene by agents of the FBI...

MOVING ANGLE (STILL TV FOOTAGE)

as Jack Crawford is seen striding towards the front door of 
Catherine's apartment, followed by Burroughs and other agents. 
One of them moves quickly towards the CAMERA, waving it back.

REC ROOM ANGLE - FAVORING ARDELIA

as the other trainees send up a brief, ironic cheer. But 
Ardelia turns sympathetically towards the troubled Clarice.

ARDELIA
I don't know whether to say "I'm 
sorry," or "Congratulations." But 
girl? - you just went prime time.

CUT TO:

EXT. SMITHSONIAN - MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY - DAY

The massive Victorian building looms over Constitution Avenue. 
Clarice quickly mounts the steps, carrying a small plastic 
box.

CRAWFORD
I don't think he knew that she's a 
Senator's child. She's a big girl, 
Starling, like all the rest. We're 
going on the theory she was randomly 
targeted by size...

CUT TO:

INT. MUSEUM CORRIDOR - DAY

Clarice, now accompanied by a museum guard, walks through an 
eerie landscape of dinosaur bones - crouching skeletons with 
blank eye sockets, gaping fangs.

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
By now, Bill's had her for 36 hours. 
That leaves us just 36 more, before 
he kills her... But maybe, just maybe, 
Starling, we caught a real break 
this time - thanks to you.
(beat)
We found another bug, in Raspail's 
head.

CUT TO:

INT. MUSEUM OFFICE - DAY

CLOSE ON an live, enormous, rhinoceros beetle, as it weaves 
its clumsy way among the men on a chessboard, before finally 
stepping off the edge, onto a lettuce leaf.

RODEN (V.O.)
Time, Pilch! My move.

PILCHER (V.O.)
No fair! You lured him with produce.

WIDER ANGLE

shows two entomologists, both 30ish, hunched over the board. 
RODEN is a pudgy redhead; PILCHER is lean, quite handsome.

RODEN
Tough noogies! It's still my turn.

CLARICE (O.S.)
If the beetle moves one of your men, 
does that count?

They look up, delighted to see Clarice in the doorway. Both 
men are hopelessly smitten by her.

RODEN
Of course it counts. How do you play?

PILCHER
(grins)
Officer Starling. Welcome back.

CUT TO:

INT. ENTOMOLOGY CORRIDOR - DAY

MOVING ANGLE as Clarice and the two men go briskly down a 
hall lined with mounted insects, in all shapes and sizes. 
Roden peers at Clarice's new cocoon, in its box.

RODEN
Where the hell did this one come 
from? It's practically mush.

CLARICE
You really don't want to know.

PILCHER
Your West Virginia specimen gave us 
quite a bit of trouble, but I finally 
managed to narrow his species through 
chaetaxy - studying the skin.

RODEN
I'm the one who found his perforating 
proboscis! Are you wearing a gun, 
right now?
(Clarice nods)
Ooh, cool! Can I see it? Can I?

PILCHER
Just ignore him. He's not a Ph.D.

CUT TO:

INT. LABORATORY - DAY

VERY CLOSE (MAGNIFICATION) on the sliced cocoon, as Roden 
uses tweezers and a dental probe to ease out the sodden 
chrysalis.

RODEN (O.S.)
The whole trick is to remove the 
chrysalis without destroying it... 
The wings are just like wet tissue 
paper...

THE TWO MEN

are hunched over a formica table, peering through square 
magnifiers into stainless trays. Clarice watches curiously. 
Of their two specimens, Pilcher's moth is in much better 
condition - a big brown creature, its wings outspread on 
towel paper.

PILCHER
(without looking up)
What do you do when you're not 
detecting, Officer Starling?

CLARICE
I try to be a student, Dr. Pilcher.

PILCHER
Ever get out for cheeseburgers and 
beer? The amusing house wine...?

CLARICE
(smiles)
Not lately. But maybe someday.

He looks up at her, shyly. A little moment passes between 
them, before Roden straightens, exultant.

RODEN
Positive match!

CLARICE
You're sure?

RODEN
(points with his dental 
probe)
West Virginia... Baltimore. Officer 
Starling, meet Mister Acherontia 
Styx.

He moves aside for Clarice to get a closer look at Pilcher's 
specimen. She leans forward, intently.

HER POV (MAGNIFICATION)

the wide, furry, brown back of the moth. And there, right 
between the wing bases - wonderful and terrible to see - is 
nature's perfect reproduction of a ghostly human skull.

RODEN (O.S.)
Better known to his friends as the 
Death's-head Moth...

PILCHER (O.S.)
The Latin name comes from two rivers 
in Hell. Your man - he drops these 
girls into rivers, every time. Didn't 
I read that?

FAVORING CLARICE

as she looks up at him, awed, excited, almost trembling.

CLARICE
And there's no way - no natural way - 
these could've wound up in the bodies?

PILCHER
(shakes his head)
They live in Malaysia. In this 
country, they'd have to be specially 
raised, from imported eggs.

CLARICE
(pause, then softly)
Dr. Lecter...

As the two men stare at her, puzzled, we hear a SOUND UPCUT - 
the wail of police SIRENS - and...

CUT TO:

EXT. U.S. ROUTE 95 - DAY (AERIAL SHOT)

An awesome armada of police vehicles swings through an 
intersection, while normal traffic is held back by highway 
patrol cruisers.

The lead cars turn off, hit the entrance ramp to the freeway - 
SIRENS going, tires SQUEALING, red flashers...

CLOSER ANGLE

on a speeding surveillance van, with long antennas and a 
small satellite dish, near the head of the motorcade.

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Maybe we can trace how he buys the 
bugs, starting with U.S. Customs...

CUT TO:

INT. THE SURVEILLANCE VAN - DAY (DRIVING)

The van is crammed with an impressive array of hi-tech 
equipment, all CLICKING and HUMMING. Burroughs is talking 
quietly on a scrambler phone, while another agent works a 
computer.

CRAWFORD (O.S.)
Maybe we can locate some of Raspail's 
old lovers. Maybe, someday...

CLARICE AND CRAWFORD

sit in swivel seats at the rear, by a big window. Clarice 
can't resit an occasional peak at the trailing motorcade, 
awed and a bit thrilled to be the center of so much attention.

CRAWFORD
But for Catherine Martin, it all 
comes down to you and Lecter. You're 
the one he talks to.

CLARICE
He's already offered to help... What 
would happen if we just showed our 
cards - asked him for Bill?

CRAWFORD
He offered to help, Starling, not to 
snitch. That wouldn't give him enough 
chance to show off. Remember, Lecter 
looks mainly for fun. Never forget 
fun.

CLARICE
But if he knew we have so little 
time -

CRAWFORD
If we act too anxious, he'll make us 
wait. He'll let the Senator keep 
hoping, day after day, until Catherine 
finally washes up. That'd be the 
most fun of all.

CLARICE
I think he means it, this time. I 
think he'll deal.

CRAWFORD
What would it take?

CLARICE
Transfer to a new prison. With a 
view of trees, he said, or even 
water... Can we swing that?

CRAWFORD
(shakes his head)
State to federal jurisdiction... We 
can do it - eventually - but we'll 
never get all the clearances in time. 
Can you convince him a deal's already 
in place?

CLARICE
You'll back me up with some paperwork?
(he nods)
Then I'll try. But wouldn't this 
have more weight coming from the 
Senator herself?

CRAWFORD
(hesitates)
She doesn't know what we're up to. 
And we can't afford to let her find 
out.

Clarice looks at him, surprised.

CRAWFORD
She's the mother, Starling. She can't 
possibly comprehend what Lecter is. 
She'd make the mistake of pleading 
with him. Begging him... He'd feast 
on her pain till the last second of 
that girl's life...

CUT TO:

INT. BALTIMORE STATE HOSP. FOR THE CRIMINALLY INSANE - DAY

Chilton approaches, walking briskly down a corridor in the 
administration wing. He looks quite agitated.

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
We can't trust Frederick Chilton, 
either. He's greedy and ambitious. 
If he knew about Lecter's link to 
Bill, he's go straight to the 
newspapers...

Chilton falls into step beside Clarice, who has her briefcase. 
He points his gold pen at her accusingly.

CHILTON
What you're doing, Miss Starling, is 
coming into my hospital to conduct 
an interview, and refusing to share 
information with me. For the third 
time!

CLARICE
Dr. Chilton, I told you - this is 
just routine follow-up on the Raspail 
case.

CHILTON
He's my patient! I have rights!
(grabs her arm, 
stopping her)
I'm not just some turnkey, Miss 
Starling. I shouldn't even be here 
this afternoon. I had a ticket to 
Holiday on Ice.

She stares at him, with pity and distaste, till he lets go.

CLARICE
I'm acting on instruction, Dr. 
Chilton.
(handing him a card)
This is the U.S. Attorney's number. 
Now please - either discuss this 
with him, or let me do my job.

She walks away, leaving him speechless with frustration and 
hostility. He clicks his pen, watching her go.

CUT TO:

INT. DR. LECTER'S CELL AND CORRIDOR - DAY

Dr. Lecter sits at his table, languidly sketching with 
charcoal on butcher paper.

He uses his own hand and forearm as a model. His other 
drawings, books, and bedding have been restored.

DR. LECTER
Wouldn't you say, Clarice, that for 
a United States Senator, you're an 
odd choice of messenger?

Clarice, sitting again at the desk-chair, is taking papers 
from her briefcase.

CLARICE
I was your choice, Dr. Lecter. You 
chose to speak to me. Would you prefer 
someone else now? Or perhaps you 
don't think you can help us.

DR. LECTER
That is both impudent and untrue... 
Tell me, how did you feel when you 
viewed our Billy's latest effort?
(beat; he smiles)
Or should I say, his "next-to-latest"?

CLARICE
By the book, he's a sadist.

DR. LECTER
Life's too slippery for books, 
Clarice. Typhoid and swans came from 
the same God.
(beat)
Tell me, Miss West Virginia - was 
she a large girl?

CLARICE
Yes.

DR. LECTER
Big through the hips. Roomy.

CLARICE
They all were.

DR. LECTER
Mmm. And what else...?

CLARICE
She had an insect deliberately 
inserted in her throat. That hasn't 
been made public yet. We don't know 
what is means.

DR. LECTER
Was it a butterfly?

CLARICE
(pause; staring at 
him)
A moth... How did you predict that?

DR. LECTER
I'm waiting for your offer, Clarice. 
Enchant me.

Clarice looks down at her papers, taking a moment to collect 
her thoughts. She looks up at him again, evenly.

CLARICE
If you help us find Buffalo Bill in 
time to save Catherine Martin, the 
Senator promises you a transfer to 
the V.A. hospital at Oneida Park, 
New York, with a view of the woods 
nearby. Maximum security still 
applies, but you'd have reasonable 
access to books.

He is silent. She rises, moves closer, carrying papers.

CLARICE
Best of all, though - one week a 
year you'd get to leave the hospital 
and go here.
(points to a map)
Plum Island. Every afternoon of that 
week you can walk on the beach or 
swim in the ocean for up to one hour. 
Under SWAT team surveillance, of 
course...

His face remains neutral. She puts the papers in his food 
tray.

CLARICE
Copy of the Buffalo Bill case file, 
copy of Senator Martin's terms. Her 
offer is final and non-negotiable. 
If Catherine dies -
(she slides his tray 
through)
You get nothing.

A measured beat, before he rises smoothly, crosses, and looks 
down at the papers, without touching them.

DR. LECTER
"Plum Island Animal Disease Research 
Center." Sounds charming.

CLARICE
That's just part of the island. It 
has a very nice beach. Terns nest 
there.

DR. LECTER
Terns... If I help you, Clarice, it 
will be "turns" with us, too. Quid 
pro quo. I tell you things, you tell 
me things. Not about this case, though - 
about yourself. Yes or no?
(she is silent)
Yes or no, Clarice. Catherine is 
waiting. Tick-tock, tick-tock...

She looks at him. A beat. They are standing uncomfortably 
close.

CLARICE
Go, Doctor.

DR. LECTER
What's your worst memory of childhood?
(she hesitates)
Quicker than that. I'm not interested 
in your worst invention.

CLARICE
The death of my father.

DR. LECTER
Tell me. Don't lie, or I'll know.

Clarice cannot bear the feverish excitement in his eyes. She 
looks past him, hesitating again.

CLARICE
He was a town marshal... one night 
he surprised two burglars, coming 
out the back of a drugstore... They 
shot him.

DR. LECTER
Killed outright?

CLARICE
No. He was strong, he lasted almost 
a month. My mother - died when I was
very young, so my father had become - 
the whole world to me... After he 
left me, I had nobody. I was ten 
years old.

DR. LECTER
You're very frank, Clarice. I think - 
it would be quite something to know 
you in private life.

CLARICE
Quid pro quo, Doctor.

DR. LECTER
The significance of the moth is 
change. Caterpillar into cocoon into 
beauty... Billy wants to change, 
too, Clarice. But there's the problem 
of his size, you see. Even if he 
were a woman, he'd have to be a big 
one...

CLARICE
(puzzled)
Dr. Lecter, there's no correlation 
in the literature between 
transsexualism and violence. 
Transsexuals are very passive.

DR. LECTER
Clever girl. You're so close to the 
way you're going to catch him - do 
you realize that?

CLARICE
No. Tell me why.

DR. LECTER
After your father's death, you were 
orphaned. What happened next?
(Clarice drops her 
gaze)
I don't imagine the answer's on those 
second-rate shoes, Clarice.

CLARICE
I went to live with my mother's cousin 
and her husband in Montana. They had 
a ranch.

DR. LECTER
A cattle ranch?

CLARICE
Horses - and sheep...

DR. LECTER
How long did you live there?

CLARICE
Two months.

DR. LECTER
Why so briefly?

CLARICE
I - ran away...

DR. LECTER
Why, Clarice? Did the rancher fuck 
you?

CLARICE
(angrily)
No.

DR. LECTER
Did he try to?

CLARICE
No...! Quid pro quo, Doctor.

DR. LECTER
Billy's not a real transsexual, but 
he thinks he is. He tries to be. 
He's tried to be a lot of things, I 
expect.

CLARICE
You said - I was very close to the 
way we'd catch him.

DR. LECTER
There are three major centers for 
transsexual surgery: Johns Hopkins, 
the University of Minnesota, and 
Columbus Medical center. I wouldn't 
be surprised if Billy has applied 
for sex reassignment at one or all 
of them, and been rejected.

CLARICE
On what basis would they reject him?

DR. LECTER
The personality inventories would 
trip him up. Rorschach, Wechsler, 
House-Tree-Person... He wouldn't 
test like a real transsexual.

CLARICE
How would he test?

Suddenly Dr. Lecter snarls, loudly, stretching. Clarice take 
a sharp step backwards before he smiles, turning his movement 
into an elaborate yawn. He gathers the papers from his tray.

DR. LECTER
That's enough, I think. Happy hunting. 
Oh, and Clarice - next time you will 
tell me why you ran away. Shall I 
summarize?

CLARICE
(shaken)
Yes, Doctor. Please.

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY

VERY CLOSE ON a cocoon, split along its back, as a living 
Death's-head Moth wriggles torturously free. Trembling and 
damp, the new creature clings to a sprig of nightshade.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
You should try to obtain a list of 
males rejected from all three gender 
reassignment centers...

PULLING BACK

we see a big wire cage, holding several of the moths. They 
crawl over the humus floor or feed at honeycombs, wings 
pumping lazily. In the distant background, the incongruous 
SOUND of show music.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Check first the ones rejected for 
lying about criminal records...

CONTINUOUS MOVING ANGLE

at about knee level, as we leave the cage, and begin to TRAVEL 
through this eerie, dimly-lit warren of a cellar.

As we go - occasionally TURNING corners, or skirting the 
dark openings of unexplored passages - various objects loom 
briefly INTO VIEW, overhead - a stainless-steel work table... 
a big sink... jars of chemicals... neat racks of gleaming 
knives...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Among those who tried to conceal 
their past, look for severe childhood 
disturbances, associated with 
violence... Possibly you'll find a 
childhood incarceration... Then go 
to their personality tests...

We pass a row of female mannequins, some nude, some wearing 
colorful leather jackets, designer knockoffs, in various 
stages of completion... then a huge maroon armoire, in Chinese 
lacquer; its double doors are slightly ajar... The jaunty 
background.

MUSIC is growing even louder: Fats Waller singing "Bye Bye 
Baby." And now we hear something else, too - the rapid 
CLICKING of a sewing machine...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Study their drawings, especially. 
Billy's house drawings will show no 
happy future... No baby carriage, 
out in the yard. No pets, no toys, 
no flowers, no sun...

We TURN another corner, and there is Mr. Gumb himself. As we 
APPROACH, his wide back is to us; he's hunched over an old-
fashioned sewing machine, humming cheerfully, and working a 
piece of material that we mercifully cannot see. A female 
wig rests near him on a head form. He wears a hairnet and a 
beautiful kimono, and pumps the treadle with his bare feet.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
His females will be more crudely 
sketched than him males - but he'll 
compensate by adding exaggerated 
adornments... jewelry, big breasts... 
And his tree drawings - oh, his trees 
will be frightful...

Next to Mr. Gumb is an antique phonograph - source of the 
MUSIC. His little dog, Precious, perches by his plump ankles. 
As we PASS Mr. Gumb, Precious scurries away from him, panting 
happily, and we FOLLOW the little dog down another corridor, 
the music starting to fade behind us...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Billy hates his own identity, he 
always has - and he thinks that makes 
him a transsexual. But his pathology 
is a thousand times more savage... 
He wants to be reborn, Clarice. He 
will be reborn...

At the end of this final corridor, the cellar widens into a 
low-ceilinged chamber, with two additional doorways, and in 
the center of this is the gaping circle of the oubliette. 
Precious sniffs her way over to the edge - excited, tail 
wagging - than BARKS happily as we hear a hoarse, ghostly 
moan from below.

CATHERINE (O.S.)
Pleeeeeeeease.....!

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. DR. LECTER'S CORRIDOR - DAY

MOVING ANGLE - CLOSE ON Dr. Lecter's slippered feet, which 
rest on the shelf of a rolling hand truck. RISING along his 
tilted form, we see that his ankles are linked by steel 
restraints... his legs, waist, upper torso, and arms are 
bound by heavy canvas webbing... beneath the webbing is a 
strait-jacket... and over his face is a hockey mask.

CHILTON (V.O.)
Bad news, Hannibal...

WIDER ANGLE

shows that Dr. Lecter, on the handtruck, is being pushed 
down his corridor by Barney, and back into his open cell.

CHILTON (V.O.)
Gourmet magazine has rejected your 
recipe for braised kidneys...

CUT TO:

INT. DR. LECTER'S CELL - DAY

Chilton lounges on Dr. Lecter's cot, casually reading his 
large stack of private correspondence, and making notations 
with his gold pen on a little pad. Another orderly mops the 
floor.

CHILTON
Perhaps you should have been less 
specific about what kind.
(to Barney)
Stand him by the toilet. Then leave 
us.

Barney props the hand truck into position, then both orderlies 
go. Chilton finishes another letter, sighs happily.

CHILTON
Such a lot of correspondence! I can 
hardly wait to analyze it in more 
detail... But first things first.

Tossing letters onto the cot, he rises, crosses out into the 
corridor, and bends to remove a small tape recorder from 
underneath Clarice's desk. He waggles it triumphantly at Dr. 
Lecter.

CHILTON
I thought she might be looking for a 
civil rights violation in Migg's 
death, so I bugged you... Not a word 
to me in all these years, Hannibal. 
Then Crawford sends his bit of fluff 
over here, and you just turn to jelly. 
It's too pathetic.

SIDE ANGLE - TWO SHOT

as Chilton, back in the cell, leans tauntingly close to the 
front of Dr. Lecter's mask.

CHILTON
You still think you're going to walk 
on some beach, and see the birdies? 
I don't think so, Hannibal... I called 
Senator Ruth Martin, and she never 
heard of any deal with you. She never 
heard of Clarice Starling, either. 
They scammed you, Hannibal...

CLOSE ON Dr. Lecter's glittering eyes, behind their slits.

CHILTON
When Crawford gets through milking 
you, he's giving you to Baltimore 
Homicide for the Raspail murder. And 
they're preparing some special 
surprises for you right now, in my 
electroshock room.

DR. LECTER'S POV (FRAMED BY EYE-SLITS)

first looking at Chilton's moving lips... then LOWERING to 
his soft, white, inviting throat...

CHILTON
The Starling bitch wants you to rot 
here, in this little box, till your 
teeth fall out and you're soiling 
diapers. You've seen the old ones, 
Hannibal. They weep when their stewed 
peaches get cold. That'll be you, 
too. Unless - you trade with me.

FAVORING CHILTON

as he sits chummily on the table.

CHILTON
There never was a deal with Senator 
Martin - but there is now. I've been 
on the phone for hours, Hannibal, on 
your behalf. Here's what you get: if 
you identify Buffalo Bill, and the 
girl is found in time, Senator Martin 
will have you transferred to Brushy 
Mountain State Prison, in Tennessee...

CLOSE AGAIN ON DR. LECTER'S EYES

as they shift restlessly, away from Chilton - then suddenly 
lock onto something. They widen with interest.

CHILTON (O.S.)
The Governor has already agreed. You 
get books, a view of the woods, and 
plenty of exercise time...

DR. LECTER'S POV - EXTREME CLOSEUP

On the cot, carelessly left there, lying half-hidden under 
the letters and the rumpled sheet... is Chilton's gold pen.

CHILTON (O.S.)
And best of all, you'd be out of 
Jack Crawford's reach, forever. The 
Senator will verify these terms on 
the phone, and guarantee them in 
writing...

BACK ON DR. LECTER

as he stares a moment longer at the pen, then shifts his 
eyes towards Chilton. We can almost hear his brain clicking.

CHILTON (O.S.)
In exchange, I get your full 
cooperation in publishing a 
professional account of this - my 
successful interviews with you. You 
publish nothing. And I get exclusive 
access to any material from Catherine 
Martin... So. Do you accept my 
demands?
(pause)
Answer me, Hannibal.

A beat. Dr. Lecter is silent. Chilton sticks his face INTO 
SHOT, almost intimately close to the mask. He is agitated.

CHILTON
You'll answer me now, or by God, 
you'll answer to Baltimore Homicide. 
Who is Buffalo Bill?

DR. LECTER
(pause; then softly)
I'll tell the Senator herself. But 
only in Tennessee...

CUT TO:

INT. JOHNS HOPKINS - GENDER IDENTITY CLINIC - DAY

MOVING ANGLE - as the very impatient Crawford, clutching a 
folder, strides down a hall beside DR. DANIELSON - early 
50's, severe, in a lab coat. Nurses, doctors, glance as they 
pass.

DR. DANIELSON
I'm not having a witch hunt here, 
Mr. Crawford! Our patients are decent, 
non-violent people with a real 
problem.

CRAWFORD
Dr. Danielson, the man we want was 
never your patient. It would be 
someone you refused because he tries 
to conceal a record of criminal 
violence. Please, Doctor - time is 
eating us up. Just show me the ones 
you've turned away.

Danielson enters a cramped, stainless steel nurse's gallery, 
with Crawford following, and pours himself a cup of coffee.

DR. DANIELSON
(adamantly)
Examination and interview materials 
are confidential. We've never violated 
an applicant's trust, and we never 
will.

CRAWFORD
You want to see a violation? This is 
a violation...

He takes a black & white photo from his folder, slaps it 
down in front of Danielson. From our angle, we can't see it 
clearly.

CRAWFORD
Her name is Kimberly Jane Emberg, 
she was just ID'd. I met her on a 
slab in West Virginia. And sometime 
tomorrow, or tomorrow night, he's 
going to do the same thing to 
Catherine Martin.

DR. DANIELSON
That's a childish, bullying stunt, 
Mr. Crawford. I was a battlefield 
surgeon, so you can put away your 
picture.

Burroughs sticks his head in, looking for Crawford.

BURROUGHS
Phone, Jack. Director Burke.

CRAWFORD
(snaps)
In a minute!

Burroughs hurriedly retreats. Crawford strains for patience.

CRAWFORD
Look... search your own records, if 
you prefer. You can do it a lot faster 
than us, anyway. If we find Buffalo 
Bill through your information, I'll 
suppress it. Nobody has to know this 
hospital cooperated.

DR. DANIELSON
I doubt very much that the FBI or 
any other government agency can keep 
a secret, Mr. Crawford. Truth will 
out... And then what? Will you give 
Johns Hopkins a new identity? Put a 
big pair of sunglasses on this 
building, and a funny nose?

CRAWFORD
Oh, that's clever, Dr. Danielson. 
Very humorous. You like the truth? 
Try this.
(right in his face, 
enraged)
He kidnaps young women and kills 
them and rips their skin off. We 
don't want him to do that anymore. 
If you don't help me, just as fast 
as you can, then the Justice 
Department is going to ask publicly 
for a court order, We'll ask twice a 
day, just in time for the morning 
and evening news. And each one of 
our press conferences will focus on 
Dr. Danielson, over at Johns Hopkins, 
and how we're still hoping for his 
cooperation. And every time there's 
any news on the case - when Catherine 
Martin floats, when the next one 
floats, and the next one - why, we'll 
just issue another press release 
about good ol' Dr. Danielson, over 
at Johns Hopkins - complete with all 
his humorous fucking remarks.

DR. DANIELSON
(pause; stiffly)
It may be that - I could confer with 
my colleagues on this. And get back 
to you.

CRAWFORD
Would you, Doctor? That would be so 
kind.

CUT TO:

INT. THE SURVEILLANCE VAN - DAY

Crawford is on the scrambler phone. Burroughs watches 
silently.

CRAWFORD
(on phone; stunned)
Transferred...?

CUT TO:

INT. FBI BUILDING - OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR - DAY

HAYDEN BURKE, the FBI Director, swivels in his big chair. 
Lean, late 40's, very distinguished. His desk is flanked by 
flags.

DIRECTOR BURKE
(on phone)
Already airborne for Memphis. Senator 
Martin's meeting him at the airport.
(uneasily)
Jack - did you make some sort of 
promise to Lecter, in the Senator's 
name?

Listening to the answer, he looks uncomfortably across his 
desk at PAUL KRENDLER, the Deputy Attorney General - 40, 
very tanned, modish haircut. Krendler is irritable, impatient.

DIRECTOR BURKE
(on phone)
We're going to have to talk about 
this, Jack. The Senator's mad as 
hell. Paul Krendler's over here from 
Justice, she's asking him to take 
charge in Memphis... I know that... 
But you're still in command of the 
task force, and Lecter's plane can 
still be ordered back. It's your 
call, Jack - but I want it now.

CUT BACK TO:

INT. THE SURVEILLANCE VAN - DAY

Burroughs starts to make an objection, but Crawford stills 
him with a hand motion. He is taut, frustrated. Long pause.

CRAWFORD
(into phone)
Let him land.

CUT TO:

INT.CLARICE'S DORM ROOM - DOORWAY - DAY

Clarice opens her door, stares out at Crawford. She's just 
slipping on her blazer, over her shoulder holster. She's 
furious.

CLARICE
Chilton has killed her, hasn't he? 
That slimy little bastard! We were 
so close with Lecter - and now her 
last chance is gone.

CRAWFORD
Let's get some coffee and talk.

CUT TO:

EXT. FBI ACADEMY GROUNDS - QUANTICO - DAY

MOVING ANGLE on Clarice and Crawford, as they walk along a 
sidewalk, sipping from paper cups. The surveillance van trails 
them slowly, radios CRACKLING.

CLARICE
Are you in trouble over this, Mr. 
Crawford? Can Senator Martin do 
something to you?

CRAWFORD
I'm 53, Starling. If I found Jimmy 
Hoffa on national TV, I'd still have 
to retire in two years. It's not a 
consideration. But you are...
(beat)
You've done enough. If I keep you 
out of school any longer, you'll be 
recycled. Cost you six months, at 
least. I can guarantee you readmission 
here, but that's about it.
(he stops, looks at 
her)
Now's your chance, Starling. Go back 
to class. Leave Bill to me.

CLARICE
If you didn't want me chasing him, 
you shouldn't have taken me to that 
funeral home.

He looks at her steadily, then nods. They walk on.

CLARICE
Lecter is still the key, I know he 
is. Whatever he told me about Bill 
is just as good now as it was before.

CRAWFORD
Or just as worthless. But I want you 
in Memphis, close to him. Maybe when 
he gets tired of toying with Senator 
Martin, he'll talk to you again. 
There's a plane waiting for you now 
at the airstrip.

She smiles at this acknowledgment; he never thought she's 
quit.

CLARICE
I lied to Lecter. I'll need some 
kind of peace offering... Can I get 
the drawings from his cell?

CRAWFORD
Good idea. Meantime, try to get a 
feel for Catherine Martin. Her 
apartment, her friends... how he 
might've stalked her. I'm going to 
the other two clinics, Minnesota and 
Ohio.
(he crumples his cup, 
tosses it)
Now's the hardest part, Starling. 
Use your anger, don't let it keep 
you from thinking. Just keep your 
eyes on Catherine. We've got less 
than 30 hours.

CLARICE
(hesitates)
Mr. Crawford... can those cops down 
there handle Dr. Lecter?

CRAWFORD
(grimly)
They'll use their best men. But they 
better be paying attention...

CUT TO:

INT. AIR NATIONAL GUARD HANGER - MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE - DAY

CLOSE ON Dr. Lecter. Behind his mask, the alert, searching 
eyes.

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
He will...

OFFICERS PEMBRY AND BOYLE

two sturdy, well-armed, veteran prison guards - are checking 
Dr. Lecter's restraints with clever, careful fingers.

BOYLE
Welcome to Memphis, Dr. Lecter. I'm 
Officer Boyle, this is Officer Pembry. 
We aim to treat you just as nice as 
you treat us. Act like a gentlemen, 
you'll get three hots and a cot.

PEMBRY
But we ain't pussy-footin' with you, 
buddy ruff. You get cute, try to 
bite somebody? - we'll tie your 
asshole in a knot. You savvy?

DR. LECTER
Oh yes, Officer Pembry. I certainly 
do.

The officers turn away, Boyle signing a clipboarded form.

PEMBRY
(under his breath)
Shit, he's just an ol' broke-dick. 
Won't be no trouble as all if he 
don't flip out.

BOYLE
Dr. Chilton...?

NEW ANGLE - WIDER

as we see that we're in a vast, dusty hangar. Parked to one 
side: an EMS ambulance and four highway patrol cruisers; a 
dozen troopers stand quietly chatting and smoking over there. 
Prentiss is pacing impatiently, casting anxious glances 
towards the open hanger doorway.

BOYLE
If you'll please sign right here, 
sir, we'll have us a legal transfer.

Chilton instinctively pats his shirt pocket for his gold 
pen; it's gone. He searches other pockets, with growing 
unhappiness.

BOYLE
Use mine.

PEMBRY
Here they come.

TWO BLACK STRETCH LIMOUSINES

glide smoothly into the hangar, stop. Secret Service agents 
pour out of the lead car, form a cordon. A driver opens the 
rear door of the second car, and Krendler steps out, followed 
by the Senator's assistant, with a briefcase, followed, as 
last, by the Senator herself. Barely glancing around, she 
strides towards Lecter.

NEW ANGLE - DR. LECTER AND SEN. MARTIN

as she stops, struck by the bizarre spectacle of his 
restraints. The others instinctively keep a distance, but 
Chilton, with theatrical relish, unstraps and removes Dr. 
Lecter's mask.

CHILTON
Senator Martin, meet Dr. Hannibal 
Lecter.

They stare at one another for a long moment: the Senator 
tense, almost haggard, the madman with his unearthly poise.

SEN. MARTIN
Dr. Lecter, I've brought an affidavit 
guaranteeing your new rights... You'll 
want to read it before I sign.

He assistant unsnaps his briefcase, reaches for the form.

DR. LECTER
I won't waste your time and 
Catherine's time bargaining for petty 
privileges. Clarice Starling and 
that awful Jack Crawford have wasted 
far too much already. I only pray 
they haven't doomed the poor girl... 
Let me help you now, and I'll trust 
you when it's all over.

SEN. MARTIN
You have my word. Paul?

Krendler raises a pad, poised to take notes.

DR. LECTER
Buffalo Bill's real name is William 
Rubin. I met him just once. He was 
referred to me in April or May, 1980, 
by my patient Benjamin Raspail. They 
were lovers, but Raspail had become 
very frightened. Apparently Rubin 
had murdered a transient, and - done 
things with the skin. He thought if 
I could cure Billy, then Billy'd be 
safe from the police, and he's be 
safe from Billy... Obviously, he was 
wrong.

KRENDLER
We need his address, a physical descr-

DR. LECTER
Did you nurse Catherine?

SEN. MARTIN
(pause; startled)
What...?

DR. LECTER
Did you breast-feed her?

He flicks his tongue obscenely.

KRENDLER
You son-of-a -

The Senator stills him with a hand. She is trembling.

SEN. MARTIN
Yes... I did.

DR. LECTER
Toughened your nipples, didn't it...?
(a beat; then rapidly, 
bored)
Six foot one, strongly built, about 
190 pounds. Hair brown, eyes pale 
blue. He'd be about 35 now. He said 
he lived in Philadelphia, but may 
have lied. That's really all I can 
remember, Senator - but if I think 
of any more, I'll let you know.

SEN. MARTIN
(to the others)
Let's go with it.

They start towards the car, but he calls out, stopping her.

DR. LECTER
Senator Martin...! You can't trust 
Jack Crawford or Clarice Starling. 
It's such a game with these people. 
They're determined to get the arrest 
for themselves. The "collar," I think 
they say.

SEN. MARTIN
Thank you, Doctor. I'll keep it in 
mind.

DR. LECTER
Oh, and Senator...? Love you suit.

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S BASEMENT - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

CLOSE ON scraps of food - peas, chicken bones - lying on the 
cement floor of the pit, near the foil tray of a TV dinner.

CATHERINE (O.S.)
(muttering, feisty)
Close enough to fuck is close enough 
to fight...

CATHERINE

is hunched over in concentration. The plastic toilet bucket 
is on her lap, and she has yanked down its cotton string.

CATHERINE
Get my legs round your neck, you 
goddamn creep, I'll send you home to 
Jesus...

HER FINGERS

are tying a chicken bone to the bucket's handle, where it 
meets the string. The other end of the string is tied to her 
wrist.

SHE STANDS

gathers the coiled string in one hand, and swings the bucket 
by its handle, calculating this distance up to the basement 
floor.

CATHERINE
Okay, Precious. Time for a treat...

She hurls the bucket upwards.

AT THE LIP OF THE OUBLIETTE

the bucket sails out, bounces LOUDLY, then falls back inside.

ANGLE ON THE DOG, PRECIOUS

who is elsewhere in the basement, worrying a toy. She cocks 
an ear, making a low GROWL, then sets off to investigate.

DOWN IN THE PIT

Catherine swings the bucket again, trying another cast.

THE BUCKET LANDS

two feet beyond the pit's edge, rolls a bit, stops.

PRECIOUS TROTS UP

then pauses, staring curiously towards...

VERY LOW ANGLE (DOG'S POV)

the enticing chicken bone, six feet away. It twitches as 
Catherine tugs on the string, edging the bucket back towards 
the pit.

Precious with her tail wagging, BARKS - greedy but suspicious.

CATHERINE

staring upwards, pulls again, even so gently, at the string.

CATHERINE
(softly)
Preeeeecious...! C'mon, boy, nice 
yummy bone... c'mon, you little 
shit...

PRECIOUS

edges reluctantly closer... then suddenly rushes in, seizing 
the bone in her teeth. She tries to run away with it, but 
Catherine is pulling her towards the hole, working her like 
a hooked fish. Her toenails scrabble as she tries to stop.

CATHERINE

stares desperately, unable to see how she's doing.

CATHERINE
Hang on, boy... hang on...

PRECIOUS

still fights for the bone, GROWLING, as the bucket rocks 
precariously on the edge of the pit. A long, seesaw battle... 
until finally, when one of her forelegs slips momentarily 
into the hole, she panics and lets go. The bucket flops over 
the edge.

CATHERINE

crouches, covering her head as the bucket bounces off her.

CATHERINE
Nooooo...!

THE LITTLE DOG

furious, BARKS down at her, then trots away in disgust.

CLOSE ON CATHERINE

as she sinks to the cold cement. She slaps aside the foil 
tray, the scraps of food, sobbing in utter despair...

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. CATHERINE MARTIN'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - DAY

CLOSE ON a framed photo of Sen. Martin and Catherine, held 
in Clarice's cotton-gloved hands. Powdered fingerprints on 
the glass.

Clarice glances up from the photo, smiles disarmingly at -

A young STATE TROOPER sitting in Catherine's easy chair. He 
smiles back at her, then relaxes, returns to his newspaper. 
He also wears gloves.

CUT TO:

INT. KITCHEN

Clarice closes the refrigerator door, glances around.

A big REEL-TO-REEL TAPE RECORDER has been set up on the 
breakfast counter, attached to Catherine's phone. Two new 
red phones are hooked up as well.

CUT TO:

INT. BATHROOM

Clarice slides open the medicine cabinet's mirror, looks 
inside. She reaches in, pokes carefully amongst the lotions.

CUT TO:

INT. ATTIC CRAWL-SPACE

A ceiling hatch bangs open, sending up dust clouds. Clarice, 
lit from underneath, pokes her head through, looking around.

CUT TO:

INT. BEDROOM

Flat on her back, Clarice wriggles out from under Catherine's 
bed. She sits up, brushing dust from her face and hair.

CUT TO:

INT. BEDROOM

CLOSE ON an open, multi-tiered jewelry box, resting atop a 
bureau, as Clarice's fingers pick through costume jewelry.

Clarice closes the box, and is just turning away when a figure 
suddenly looms INTO SHOT, giving her a bad start; she cries 
out softly.

Senator Martin is revealed, staring at her suspiciously.

SEN. MARTIN
Who are you, please? I thought the 
police were through in here.

CLARICE
I'm Clarice Starling, Senator. FBI.

SEN. MARTIN
(softly, very angry)
Clarice Starling...
(calls out)
Paul? Would you come in here, 
please...?

Krendler enters from the hallway, looks at Clarice.

SEN. MARTIN
Miss Starling, you may know the Deputy 
Attorney General, Mr. Krendler. Paul, 
this is the trainee that Jack Crawford 
sent to Lecter... She lied to him, 
pretending to have my authority, and 
thus jeopardized this entire 
investigation. Now she has the further 
gall to invade my daughter's privacy, 
again without permission. If her 
little games have killed my baby...

Overcome, she hurries from the room. Krendler shuts the door 
behind her, points sternly at Clarice.

KRENDLER
You're out of line, Starling, and 
you're off this case. Back to 
Quantico.

CLARICE
Sir, Mr. Crawford instructed me -

KRENDLER
Your instructions are what I'm giving 
you now. Jack Crawford answers to 
the Director, and the Director answers 
to me. My God, Crawford's losing 
it...! He shouldn't even be on this, 
with his wife sick as she is... How 
the hell did you get in here, anyway? 
He gave you - what? Some kind of 
special ID? Let's have it.

CLARICE
(stubbornly)
I need the ID to fly with my gun. 
The gun belongs in Quantico.

KRENDLER
Gun. Jesus. Turn in the ID as soon 
as you get back. The gun, too. Be on 
the next plane, Starling, there's 
one in 90 minutes.

Clarice, burning, starts for the door, then turns back.

CLARICE
Mr. Krendler... Dr. Lecter trusts 
me. Or at least, he used to. If I 
could just -

KRENDLER
Lecter has already named Buffalo 
Bill.

Clarice reacts, surprised. Krendler takes a folded computer 
sheet from his pocket, shoves it at her. She takes it, reads.

KRENDLER
He gave us a perfectly good 
description, and we're on it now, so 
we won't be needing your little 
novelty act any longer - or his, 
either. He's under close guard at 
the courthouse, pending a prison 
transfer. The next plane, Officer.

CLARICE
Sir, doesn't this "William Rubin" 
strike you as - I don't know - kind 
of vague?

Krendler moves in very close to her, pale with anger.

KRENDLER
Do you need a police escort, Starling? 
Or do you think you can find the 
airport by yourself?

CLARICE
Yes sir. I can find it by myself.

CUT TO:

EXT. SHELBY COUNTY COURTHOUSE - DAY

The old courthouse is a massive Gothic stronghold, with an 
armada of police cruisers parked at the curb.

Clarice climbs from her rented car, SLAMMING the door angrily. 
Holding a rolled-up pile of papers - Dr. Lecter's drawings - 
she starts determinedly up the steps. A nearby commotion 
makes her pause.

Dr. Frederick Chilton in a sea of interviewers and mini-cams, 
is preening grandly. 

Clarice carefully avoiding his gaze, slips up the steps and 
inside.

CUT TO:

INT. COURTHOUSE - GROUND FLOOR - DAY

SGT. TATE, a Memphis policeman, is studying Clarice's ID. He 
looks up at her from his command desk, a bit doubtfully.

SGT. TATE
Are you with Mr. Krendler's people?

CLARICE
I just left him.

SGT. TATE
Access to Lecter is strictly limited. 
We've been getting death threats.
(hesitates again)
Log in, and check your weapon.

He picks up a phone, murmurs into it. As he does so, Clarice 
glances around this main ground floor lobby.

HER POV

The building looks like an armed fort. Cops with shotguns 
guard the front door, both ends of the hall, the foot of the 
stairs, the single elevator. More of them are coming and 
going.

MURRAY (V.O.)
Shoot, we haven't had this kinda 
security since the President came 
through town...

CUT TO:

INT. ELEVATOR - MOVING

Clarice and OFFICER MURRAY, a young patrolman, ride up in an 
old-fashioned, CREAKING, metal-cage elevator. He is excited.

MURRAY
Every cop in Tennessee wants a look 
at this guy. 'Sit true what they're 
sayin' - he's some kinda vampire?

CLARICE
(beat)
I don't have a name for what he is.

CUT TO:

INT. HISTORICAL SOCIETY ROOM - 5TH FLOOR

Pembry, at a desk by the door, looks up from examining the 
unrolled pile of Dr. Lecter's drawings.

PEMBRY
You know the rules, ma'am?

CLARICE
Yes, Officer Pembry. I've questioned 
him before.

He waves her on her way, but retains the drawings for now.

MOVING ANGLE - WITH CLARICE

as she crosses the big, spare, white octagonal room. A 
massive, temporary iron cage has been installed; Officer 
Boyle sits facing its barred door. He rises, nods, moving 
away to allow her privacy.

INSIDE THE CAGE

a cot and a small table, each bolted to the floor, and a 
flimsy paper screen, hiding a toilet. Dr. Lecter sits at the 
table, his back to her, studying the Buffalo Bill case file. 
He now wears a green prison jumpsuit. A small cassette player 
is chained to the steel table.

DR. LECTER
(without turning)
Good afternoon, Clarice.

She stops at a striped police barricade, before his bars.

CLARICE
I thought you might want your drawings 
back... Just until you get your view.

DR. LECTER
How very thoughtful... Or did Crawford
send you here for one last wheedle - 
before you're both booted off the 
case?

CLARICE
Nobody sent me. I came on my own.

He spins in his swivel chair, stops neatly. A coy smile.

DR. LECTER
People will say we're in love.
(beat)
Pity you tried to fool me, isn't it? 
Pity for poor Catherine. Tick-tock...

He spins again in his chair, playfully.

MOVING ANGLE - FAVORING CLARICE

as she circles the cage, trying to keep his face in sight.

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter, you find out everything. 
You couldn't have talked with this 
"William Rubin", even once, and come 
out knowing so little about him... 
You made him up, didn't you?

DR. LECTER
Clarice... you're hardly in a position 
to accuse me of lying.

CLARICE
I think you were telling me the truth 
in Baltimore - or starting to. Tell 
me the rest now.

DR. LECTER
I've studied the case file, have 
you...? Everything you need to find 
him is right in these pages. Whatever 
his name is.

CLARICE
Then tell me how.

DR. LECTER
First principles, Clarice. Simplicity. 
Read Marcus Aurelius. Of each 
particular thing, ask: What is it, 
in itself, what is its nature...? 
What does he do, this man you seek?

CLARICE
He kills w-

DR. LECTER
(sharply, as he stops)
No! That's incidental.

CLOSE ANGLE - TWO SHOT as he rises, pained by her ignorance, 
and crosses to the bars.

DR. LECTER
What is the first and principal thing 
he does, what need does he serve by 
killing?

CLARICE
Anger, social resentment, sexual 
frus-

DR. LECTER
No, he covets. That's his nature. 
And how do we begin to covet, Clarice? 
Do we seek out things to covet? Make 
an effort to answer.

CLARICE
No. We just -

DR. LECTER
No. Precisely. We begin by coveting 
what we see every day. Don't you 
feel eyes moving over your body, 
Clarice? I hardly see how you 
couldn't. And don't your eyes move 
over the things you want?

CLARICE
All right, then tell me how -

DR. LECTER
No. It's your turn to tell me, 
Clarice. You don't have any more 
vacations to sell, on Anthrax Island. 
Why did you run away from that ranch?

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter, when there's time I'll -

DR. LECTER
We don't reckon time the same way, 
Clarice. This is all the time you'll 
ever have.

CLARICE
Later, listen, I'll -

DR. LECTER
I'll listen now. After your father's 
murder, you were orphaned. You were 
ten years old. You went to live with 
cousins, on a sheep and horse ranch 
in Montana. And - ?

CLARICE
And - one morning I just - ran away...

She turns from him. He presses closer, gripping the bars.

DR. LECTER
Not "just," Clarice. What set you 
off? You started what time?

CLARICE
Early. Still dark.

DR. LECTER
Then something woke you. What? Did 
you dream...? What was it?

IN FLASHBACK

The 10-year old Clarice sits up abruptly in her bed, 
frightened. She is in a Montana ranch house; it almost dawn. 
Strange, fearful shadows on her ceiling and walls... a window, 
partly fogged by the cold; eerie brightness outside.

CLARICE (V.O.)
I heard a strange sound...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
What was it?

THE CHILD RISES

crosses to the window in her nightgown, rubs the glass.

CLARICE (V.O.)
I didn't know. I went to look...

HIGH ANGLES (2ND STORY) - THE CHILD'S POV

Shadowy men, ranch hands, are moving in and out of a nearby 
barn, carrying mysterious bundles. The mens' breath is 
steaming... A refrigerated truck idles nearby, its engine 
adding more steam. A strange, almost surrealistic scene...

CLARICE (V.O.)
Screaming! Some kind of - screaming. 
Like a child's voice...

THE LITTLE GIRL

is terrified; she covers her ears.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
What did you do?

CLARICE (V.O.)
Got dressed without turning on the 
light. I went downstairs... outside...

THE LITTLE GIRL

in her winter coat, slips noiselessly towards the open barn 
door. She ducks into the shadows to avoid a ranch hand, who 
passes her with a squirming bundle of some kind. He goes 
into the barn, and she edges after him reluctantly.

CLARICE (V.O.)
I crept up to the barn... I was so 
scared to look inside - but I had 
to...

THE LITTLE GIRL'S POV

as the open doorway LOOMS CLOSER... Bright lights inside, 
straw bales, the edges of stalls, then moving figures...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
And what did you see, Clarice?

A SQUIRMING LAMB

is held down on a table by two ranch hands.

CLARICE (V.O.)
Lambs. The lambs were screaming...

A third cowboy stretches out the lamb's neck, raises a bloody 
knife. Just as he's about to slice its throat -

BACK TO THE ADULT CLARICE

staring into the distance, shaken, still trembling from the 
child's shock. We see Dr. Lecter, over her shoulder, studying 
her intently.

DR. LECTER
They were slaughtering the spring 
lambs?

CLARICE
Yes...! They were screaming.

DR. LECTER
So you ran away...

CLARICE
No. First I tried to free them... I 
opened the gate of their pen - but 
they wouldn't run. They just stood 
there, confused. They wouldn't run...

DR. LECTER
But you could. You did.

CLARICE
I took one lamb. And I ran away, as 
fast as I could...

IN FLASHBACK

a vast Montana plain, and crossing this, a tiny figure - the 
little Clarice, holding a lamb in her arms.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Where were you going?

CLARICE (V.O.)
I don't know. I had no food or water. 
It was very cold. I thought - if I 
can even save just one... but he got 
so heavy. So heavy...

The tiny figure stops, and after a few moments sinks to the 
ground, hunched over in dispair.

CLARICE (V.O.)
I didn't get more than a few miles 
before the sheriff's car found me. 
The rancher was so angry he sent me 
to live at the Lutheran orphanage in 
Bozeman. I never saw the ranch 
again...

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
But what became of your lamb?
(no response)
Clarice...?

BACK TO SCENE

as the adult Clarice turns, staring into his feverish eyes. 
She shakes her head, unwilling - or unable - to say more.

DR. LECTER
You still wake up sometimes, don't 
you? Wake up in the dark, with the 
lambs screaming?

CLARICE
Yes...

DR. LECTER
Do you think if you saved Catherine, 
you could make them stop...? Do you 
think, if Catherine lives, you won't 
wake up in the dark, ever again, to 
the screaming of the lambs? Do you...?

CLARICE
Yes! I don't know...! I don't know.

DR. LECTER
(a pause; then, oddly 
at peace)
Thank you, Clarice.

CLARICE
(a whisper)
Tell me his name, Dr. Lecter.

DR. LECTER
Dr. Chilton... I believe you know 
each other?

NEW ANGLE

as Clarice turns, startled, and the fuming Chilton seizes 
her elbow. Pembry and Boyle are beside him, looking grim.

CHILTON
Out. Let's go.

PEMBRY
Sorry, ma'a m - we've got orders to 
have you put on a place.

Clarice struggles, pulling free of them for a moment.

DR. LECTER
Brave Clarice. Will you let me know 
if ever the lambs stop screaming?

CLARICE
(moving closer to the 
bars)
Yes. I'll tell you.

DR. LECTER
Promise...?
(she nods. He smiles)
Then why not take your case file? I 
won't be needing it anymore.

He holds out the file, arm extended between the bars. She 
hesitates, then reaches to take it.

VERY CLOSE ANGLE - SLOW MOTION

as the exchange is made, his index finger touches her hand, 
and lingers there, just for a moment.

DR. LECTER'S EYES

widen, crackling at this touch, like sparks in a cave.

DR. LECTER
Good-bye, Clarice.

CLARICE

hugging the case file to her chest, stares back at him as 
the men crowd in on her, pushing her away.

HER POV - MOVING

as Dr. Lecter, head cocked in a smile, slowly recedes...

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. GARMENT SWEATSHOP - DAY

MOVING ANGLE - MR. GUMB'S POV as he pushes a rolling rack of 
completed leather garments, each wrapped in plastic, down as 
aisle. SOUND of many sewing machines, all clattering at once, 
as he passes row on row of work tables. The seamstresses, 
mostly black or Hispanic, glance up as he passes, then quickly 
avert their eyes, his presence disturbing them in some 
nameless way.

A thin FOREMAN in a flowery shirt, sees him approaching. He 
rises from his desk and comes over cheerfully, as the rack 
rolls to a stop.

FOREMAN
Hello, dear! Punctual as always. And 
what have you brought us today?

He seizes one of the dangling jackets, pulling up the plastic 
wrapper. He examines it, stroking the sleeve.

FOREMAN
Oh, marvelous... You know, I always 
say you're the Leonardo of leather.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
(a harsh whisper)
Oil.

FOREMAN
Pardon...?

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
You're leaving oil on the skin.

The foreman quickly releases the jacket.

FOREMAN
Of course... You'll be wanting your -

Mr. Gumb's hand reaches INTO SHOT, snatching an envelope 
from him. The foreman is watching him walk away, as a 
seamstress comes over to take the rack of garments. The 
foreman is vaguely troubled, but shakes it off. He strokes 
the jacket again, admiringly.

FOREMAN
(to seamstress)
I wish we had a dozen like him...

SOUND UPCUT - Glenn Gould playing Bach's Goldberg 
Variations...

CUT TO:

INT. MEMPHIS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT - LOUNGE AREA - DUSK

Clarice, in a line of other passengers, is moving slowly 
towards a departure ramp. Through a huge plate glass window, 
we can see her plane. She glances back over her shoulder at

A pair of UNIFORMED COPS brawny and impassive, their arms 
folded, waiting to make sure she board the flight.

Clarice sighs, turning wearily back towards the jetway. The 
BACH CONTINUES, as we...

CUT TO:

INT. SHELBY CO. COURTHOUSE - HISTORICAL SOCIETY ROOM -

NIGHT

CLOSE ON a steaming, rather elegant dinner tray, being carried 
by Pembry, as he approaches Dr. Lecter's cell.

PEMBRY
(shouts)
Ready when you are, Doc!

IN THE CELL

the BACH is issuing from the cassette player. Beside it, on 
the table, the pile of Dr. Lecter's drawings. The top one is 
an accurate, sensitive portrait, from memory, of Clarice. 
Beyond the table, we see Lecter's shadowy form, seated behind 
the paper screen. He calls out from there.

DR. LECTER (O.S.)
Just another minute, please!

Pembry grunts, sets the tray down. Boyle joins him, handing 
him a riot baton and a Mace cannister, which Pembry fastens 
to belt clips. Boyle is similarly armed, and carries a ring 
of keys.

PEMBRY
Sumbitch demanded lamb chops for 
dinner, extra rare.

BOYLE
(laughs)
What you reckon he'll want for 
breakfast - some fuckin' thing from 
the zoo?

INSIDE THE SCREEN

Dr. Lecter sits fully clothed on the toilet - swaying 
slightly, eyes closed, lost in the music, tongue working in 
his cheek. Suddenly, like magic, a little shiny piece of 
metal protrudes from his lips. He plucks it out, opens his 
eyes.

IN EXTREME CLOSEUP

he is holding the pocket clip from Prentice's disassembled 
pen - a straight, thin strip of metal, with a circular collar 
at one end, a square edge at the other.

DR. LECTER

lines up his thumbnail just shy of the square edge, then 
braces it against the stainless steel toilet rim. He pushes 
down, hard, using both hands for leverage. After a moment he 
smiles, holding up the result, and twirling it before his 
eyes.

IN EXTREME CLOSEUP

the straight end of the clip now forms a tiny right angle, 
and the circular end anchors nicely between his fingers.

OUTSIDE THE CELL

Pembry and Boyle turn as the toilet FLUSHES, and Dr. Lecter 
reappears, looking jaunty.

PEMBRY
Okay, Doc, grab some floor. Same 
drill as lunchtime.

Dr. Lecter sits on the floor, legs straight, then wriggles 
backwards. He stretches his arms behind him, hands and wrists 
through the bars, with two bars between them, and clasps his 
hands.

DR. LECTER
I'm ready when you are, Officer 
Pembry.

Pembry comes around the cell to squat behind Dr. Lecter. He 
tugs his hands farther out, rather roughly, handcuffs his 
wrists. He shakes the cuffs, making sure of them, then nods 
to Boyle.

NEW ANGLE - AT CELL DOOR

as Boyle picks up the dinner tray, and Pembry crosses around. 
Pembry takes the keys from Boyle, unlocks the cell door, and 
pushes it inward. Boyle goes inside with the tray.

DR. LECTER

watches as Boyle approaches the table, above five feet from 
him. Boyle has to set his tray down on the floor to clear 
off some of the mess of drawings. The MUSIC plays on.

VERY CLOSE ON

...Dr. Lecter's hands, outside the bars, as the makeshift 
key, held between the tips of his right index and middle 
fingers, searches for the keyhole of the cuffs. And finds 
it.

NEW ANGLE - FAVORING BOYLE

as he finishes clearing the drawings, then turns back towards 
Dr. Lecter, stooping to pick up the tray.

BOYLE'S RIGHT HAND

is just inches from the tray when Dr. Lecter's hand darts 
INTO SHOT, snapping a handcuff onto his wrist.

BOYLE

looks up, astonished, to find himself right in the grinning 
face of Dr. Lecter - who just as quickly rolls sideways, and 
snaps -

THE OTHER CUFF

around the bolted leg of the table. And suddenly all natural 
SOUND and MOTION are suspended, as the MUSIC soars much 
louder, each separate note of it now echoing distinctly, and 
we see...

VARIOUS ANGLES - EACH BLURRING INTO STOP-ACTION

Pembry starting into the cell, reaching for his riot baton... 

Dr. Lecter smashing against the cell door, driving it into 
Pembry, pinning him across the chest, against the door 
frame...

Boyle, on one knee on the floor, digging desperately in his 
pants pocket for his handcuff key...

Pembry's hand, mashed against his body by the door, as he 
strains frantically to reach the baton at his waist... 

Pembry's eyes, widening in horror as he stares at...

Dr. Lecter's bared teeth, flashing towards him...

Dr. Lecter gripping Pembry's face in his jaws, shaking it 
like a dog shakes a rat...

Boyle finding his key, but in his terror dropping it...

Dr. Lecter yanking the mace can and riot baton from the dazed 
Pembry's belt, spraying him in his bloody face, then clubbing 
him to his knees...

Boyle, mouth open in a silent scream, finding his key again, 
unlocking the handcuff, but then, as he starts to rise, 
seeing...

Dr. Lecter standing over him, with the riot baton raised 
high; he swings it viciously down, again and again and 
again...

Then normal SOUND and MOTION are restored as we go to -

CLOSE ANGLE ON

the cassette player, and the portrait of Clarice, both now 
flecked with blood. In addition to the Bach, we now hear 
soft PANTING, close by, and whimpering SOBS in the background.

ANGLE ON DR. LECTER

eyes closed, lost in a favorite passage of the music. His 
bloody fingers drift airily with the notes, as his breathing 
slows to normal. He opens his eyes, sighs contentedly, looks 
down.

HIS POV

By the sprawled legs of Boyle lie various objects that spilled 
from his pants pocket - coins, a comb, a big pocketknife.

DR. LECTER

picks up the pocketknife, examines it happily. About a four-
inch blade. He becomes aware of the WHIMPERING, off screen, 
turns.

LOW ANGLE ON PEMBRY

as he crawls, with torturous slowness, towards the command 
desk, and the phone. He is crying, but frantically determined.

PEMBRY'S POV - PARTIALLY BLURRED, THEN CLEARING

Above the desk, hanging from pegs, are his and Boyle's 
holstered revolvers...

CUT TO:

INT. COURTHOUSE - GROUND FLOOR LOBBY - NIGHT

The bronze arrow above the elevator swings towards "5," then 
indicates a stop there, at the top floor.

FAVORING SGT. TATE

at his command desk, as he stares at the indicator. Another 
cop, JACOBS, sits on the desk's edge, flipping through a 
magazine; many more cops can be seen beyond them, idling in 
the lobby.

SGT. TATE
What is this shit...? Did somebody 
go up to five?
(Jacobs shakes his 
head)
Call Pembry, ask him what -

A GUNSHOT, and then, moments later, TWO MORE quick ones, 
echo down the nearby stairwell. Sgt. Tate jumps to his feet, 
grabs a radio mike, as the other cops stir, confused and 
noisy.

SGT. TATE
(into mike)
CP, shots fired on five! Repeat, 
shots fires on five! Outside posts 
look sharp, we've got a... Ho-ly 
shit.

THE BRONZE ARROW

has begun to descend. Down to 4, then past 4...

BACK ON SGT. TATE

as he reacts. The other cops, behind him, are now in a full 
uproar, shouting, pulling out guns.

SGT. TATE
(to the others)
SHUT UP...! Guard mount, double up 
on your outside posts. Bobby, get 
the vests. Rainey, Howard, cover 
that fucking elevator if it comes 
all the way to -

A COP (O.S.)
It stopped!

THE BRONZE ARROW

has, indeed, frozen at 3. Sgt. Tate lifts the microphone 
again.

SGT. TATE
(into mike)
Seal off a ten-block radius. Get me 
the SWAT team and an ambulance, double 
quick. We're going up.

CUT TO:

INT. STAIRWELL - NIGHT (DIMLY LIT)

HIGH ANGLE on Sgt. Tate as he leads a five-man squad, all in 
bulletproof vests, up the stone stairs. They move fast but 
carefully, covering each other from landing to landing with 
drawn revolvers, shotguns. The distant Back MUSIC makes a 
ghostly echo in here...

CUT TO:

INT. THIRD FLOOR CORRIDOR - NIGHT (DIMLY LIT)

A thin rectangle of light on the floor from the open elevator 
door. We can't see inside. The MUSIC sounds closer.

SGT. TATE

approaches very cautiously, gun aimed. The other cops, behind 
him, fan out silently to set up angles of fire, checking the 
various office doors - all locked - as they creep up.

MOVING ANGLE - OVER TATE'S SHOULDER

as he reaches the side of the elevator, hesitates, then spins 
to point his gun inside. It's empty. He backs away.

SGT. TATE
(shouts at ceiling)
Pembry? Boyle...?

CUT TO:

INT. HISTORICAL SOCIETY ROOM - NIGHT (BRIGHTLY LIT)

ANGLE on the door, from inside, its lettering reversed on 
the frosted glass. The Bach is VERY LOUD.

After a moment the door is shouldered open, hard enough for 
the glass to shatter, Tate following his gun inside, moving 
low, then other cops appearing behind him in the doorframe. 
They all freeze, staring in utter horror.

SGT. TATE
Oh no... no...

THEIR POV

is a brief snapshot from hell. The two uniformed bodies, one 
sprawled on its back near the door, the other still in the 
cell, have been savaged by a knife. Blood and gore everywhere. 
The faces are unrecognizable.

SGT. TATE

struggles for control, as the other cops move grimly around 
him, into the room. He pulls his walkie-talkie from his belt.

SGT. TATE
(into mike)
Command post... Two offi-
(a beat; clears his 
throat)
Two officers down. Prisoner is 
missing. Repeat, Lecter is missing... 
He's stripped the bed, might be making 
a rope, check all windows. Where the 
fuck is my ambulance?

IN THE CELL

a cop angrily punches OFF the music. Jacobs kneels with his 
fingers on Boyle's neck.

JACOBS
Boyle is dead, Sarge. His gun's 
gone...

AT THE OTHER BODY

a cop gently removes a revolver from the bloody fist. Murray, 
the young patrolman, brings his ear reluctantly close to the 
gory face. A bloody bubble appears there; the wreckage GROANS, 
very softly.

MURRAY
This one's alive!

Tate crosses, kneels to see for himself. Murray looks green.

SGT. TATE
Take ahold of him where he can feel 
your hands, son. Talk to him.

MURRAY
What's his name, Sarge?

SGT. TATE
It's Pembry, now talk to him, God 
dammit.
(into radio, looking 
around)
Boyle's dead, Pembry's read bad. 
Lecter is missing and armed - he 
took Boyle's gun...

The other cop, checking the cylinder of Pembry's gun, holds 
up one finger to Tate.

SGT. TATE
(into radio)
Pembry got off one round - there's a 
chance Lecter was hit. We heard a 
total of three shots fired, so he's 
got four left... He's got a knife, 
too.

CUT TO:

EXT. STREET IN FRONT OF COURTHOUSE - NIGHT

VARIOUS ANGLES on a floodlit scene of barely controlled 
pandemonium. Flashing red lights, men shouting commands, 
SIRENS in the distance. SWAT members, in full gear, leap 
from a black van... fan out... swarm up the steps... EMS 
orderlies unload a gurney from an ambulance... Cops kneel 
for cover behind cars, aiming guns and rifles up at the 
windows...

CUT TO:

INT. HISTORICAL SOCIETY ROOM - NIGHT

A trio of EMS orderlies work fast over the body, already 
strapped on its gurney. They bandage a big plastic airway 
into place, over the butchered face, checking for a pulse at 
the neck. Young Murray crouches, sickened, gripping a bloody 
fist.

MURRAY
You're just fine, Pembry, lookin' 
good, buddy, you're gonna make it...

One orderly massages the heart. Another is popping a plasma 
bag, ready to insert the needle, when the body starts 
convulsing.

ORDERLY
Downstairs - let's go!

Quickly the gurney is elevated, wheeled out of the room, 
with cops rushing forward to open the doors, help push, SWAT 
men are running by in the hall, automatic rifles at the 
ready...

CUT TO:

INT. THE ELEVATOR - DESCENDING - NIGHT

Sgt. Tate, riding down with Jacobs, has his radio out.

SGT. TATE
(into mike)
Ten-four, Lieutenant. I'm on the 
elevator, bringing it down. Pembry 
and Boyle are both cleared, top three 
floors secured, main stairwell 
secured. He's somewhere on -

A spot of blood falls on his cheek. He and Jacobs stare at 
each other. Another spot hits his shoulder. They look up.

THEIR POV

Blood is dripping slowly from the corner of the service hatch.

Sgt. Tate motions for silence, as both men draw their guns.

SGT. TATE
(into mike)
Uh, we're pretty sure he's somewhere 
on two, sir... That's all for now, 
over.

CUT TO:

INT. GROUND FLOOR LOBBY - NIGHT

The elevator doors open, and Tate and Jacobs hurry out, 
stepping quickly to the side. Tate reaches back in and -

CLOSE ANGLE

Locks the elevator into position, with its doors open.

OTHER COPS are rushing up to them, curious, as Tate 
frantically pushes them aside, gesturing for silence.

SGT. TATE
(whispers)
He's on the roof of the elevator!

CUT TO:

INT. THIRD FLOOR CORRIDOR - NIGHT

Two SWAT officers, PETERSON and KUBELL, turn a key, unlocking 
and opening this floor's elevator doorway. The shaft is dark. 
Lying prone, they inch up to the edge, Peterson extends a 
mirror, on a long pole, out into the shaft.

IN THE MIRROR (DISTORTED BY THE ANGLE)

Is a distant figure, in a green prison jumpsuit, lying on 
his stomach, atop the elevator. A shiny revolver is near one 
hand.

PETERSON

whispers into a radio, as Kubell carefully tips an assault 
rifle, with a flashlight taped to its barrel, over the edge.

PETERSON
I see him... There's a weapon by his 
hand. He's not moving...

RADIO VOICE
Can you get the drop?

PETERSON
We got the drop.

RADIO VOICE
One warning. Then take him out.

Peterson nods to Kubell, who switches ON the flashlight, as 
Peterson shouts down the shaft.

PETERSON
Quinn!! put your hands on your head!!

IN THE MIRROR

the green figure shows no movement.

ANGLE ON THE COPS AGAIN

as Peterson mutters to Kubell.

PETERSON
Put one in his leg.

VERY CLOSE ON

The figure below, as Kubell's gunshot ROARS, echoing hugely 
in the shaft, and a slug rips through the jumpsuited leg. 
The figure doesn't stir.

PETERSON

staring down the shaft, raises his mike again.

PETERSON
No movement.

RADIO VOICE
Okay, Johnny, hold your fire...

CUT TO:

INT. GROUND FLOOR LOBBY - NIGHT

A small army of cops is now covering the elevator doorway, 
from both sides. Tate crouches next to the SWAT COMMANDER.

SWAT COMMANDER
(into radio mike)
We're coming into the car, we're 
opening the hatch. Watch his hands. 
Any fire will come from us. Affirm?

PETERSON'S VOICE
Got it.

The SWAT commander hands his radio to another cop, then looks 
at Tate. A long, tense moment. Then he waves a signal.

MOVING ANGLE

as we follow a picked team of four SWAT cops, in full body 
armor, rushing into the elevator car. Two men move to the 
corners, aim assault rifles at the ceiling. A third man sets 
a stepladder in place, and the fourth man, armed with a big 
Colt, hurries up the ladder and unclips the hatch.

CLOSE ON

...the service hatch, as the hinged cover drops open, and a 
body tumbles through, dangling head first, until it's caught 
at the waist. We see the back of the head.

SGT. TATE

shoulders through the SWAT cops for a closer look. He turns 
towards the SWAT commander, astonished.

SGT. TATE
That's Pembry!

CUT TO:

INT. EMS AMBULANCE - MOVING

In the rear chamber, a young EMS ATTENDANT is braced against 
the vehicle's sway. Behind him, the stretchered form of his 
patient, and, through a curtained opening, the driver. SOUND 
of the siren.

ATTENDANT
(into radio mike)
He's comatose, but his vital signs 
are good. Pressure's 130 over 90... 
Yeah, 90! Pulse 85...

Behind him, in slightly BLURRED FOCUS, the bloody figure 
sits slowly upright...

ATTENDANT
His convulsions have stopped, but 
he's got so much loose skin on his 
face, it's hard to tell if -

Suddenly he stops, becoming aware of a strange HISSING. He 
turns, puzzled...

THE POCKETKNIFE BLADE

in Lecter's fist, flashes high in the air...

CUT TO:

EXT. SIX-LANE FREEWAY - NIGHT (ARC LIGHTS)

MOVING ANGLE on the EMS ambulance, as it races along normally, 
its SIREN blazing, the heavy flow of traffic parting to make 
way for it.

Then suddenly it begins to weave erratically, changing lanes, 
before drifting dangerously to a full stop, almost side-ways. 
Cars swerve to avoid hitting it, HONKING angrily...

CLOSER ANGLE

on the stopped ambulance. After a long, still moment, the 
wind-shield wipes come on, incongruously, then stop. Then 
the SIREN is shut OFF, and the flashers. The ambulance starts 
rolling again - at first jerkingly, then with increasing 
speed. We follow it for several more moments, until is passes - 
and we LINGER on...

BIG GREEN INTERSTATE SIGN

...that reads "Memphis International Airport / 2 miles."

CLOSE ANGLE - THROUGH AMBULANCE WINDSHIELD

Dr. Lecter's face is slowly REVEALED, as he wipes across it 
with a fistful of gauze, tossing it aside...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. MONTANA PLAIN - DUSK - (IN FLASHBACK)

MOVING ANGLE, rushing with dizzy swiftness over the prairie, 
over waving grasses... a long passage... before we come at 
last to the girl Clarice, sitting with her lamb, hunched in 
despair. She rises, her face tear-stained, and turns from 
us. Holding the lamb, she starts back the way she came...

CUT TO:

EXT. COUNTRY DIRT ROAD - NIGHT - BRIGHT MOONLIGHT

MOVING ANGLE, very rapid, down this road... coming at last 
to a stopped highway patrol car. Clarice, with her lamb, is 
standing in the car's headlights. She starts wearily towards 
the sheriff...

CUT TO:

EXT. RANCH BARNYARD - NEAR DAWN

CRANE ANGLE - sweeping rapidly DOWN into the barnyard towards 
the arriving highway patrol car, as it stops... RUSHING to 
the little girl as she steps from the car, holding the lamb.

The dark figure of the rancher ENTERS FRAME. As he roughly 
takes the lamb from her, we HOLD on a CLOSEUP of her face - 
stunned, blank. She EXITS FRAME...

CUT TO:

EXT. BARN - NIGHT

MOVING ANGLE - CLARICE'S POV as she walks towards the open 
barn doorway... It looms CLOSER... The rancher is revealed, 
a shadowy figure, pinning the lamb on the killing table. His 
knife hand sweeps up high, then holds... He turns TO CAMERA, 
his face breaking into the light - and it is the face of Dr. 
Lecter. He smiles his terrible smile at the young Clarice...

CUT TO:

INT. FBI DORM - PAY PHONE IN HALLWAY - NIGHT

MOVING ANGLE - coming in very CLOSE on the adult Clarice's 
face - shocked, devastated - as she stands alone by the 
dangling receiver...

CUT TO:

INT. SHOWER STALL - FBI DORM - NIGHT

CLOSE ON a shower head, as water suddenly blasts out. Clarice 
moves INTO SHOT, as she scrubs her face and hair compulsively, 
almost desperately, unable to get clean...

ARDELIA (V.O.)
They found the ambulance...

CUT TO:

INT. CLARICE'S DORM ROOM - NIGHT

Clarice is hunched on her cot, in a bathrobe, her hair wet. 
The Buffalo Bill case file, a thick bundle, rests by her 
feet. Ardelia hovers anxiously nearby.

ARDELIA
In the parking garage at Memphis 
airport. The crew was dead. He killed 
a tourist, too. Got his clothes, 
cash... By now he could be anywhere.

Clarice looks up. Her eyes are red-rimmed with exhaustion, 
and something close to despair. She reads Ardelia's thought.

CLARICE
No. He won't come after me.

ARDELIA
Why not?

CLARICE
(bitterly)
It would be rude. And he wouldn't 
get to ask any more questions...

Ardelia sits beside her, touches her arm.

ARDELIA
Clarice - you did the best anybody 
could have for Catherine Martin. You 
stuck your neck out for her and you 
got your butt kicked for her and you 
tried. It's not your fault it ended 
this way.

CLARICE
The worst part - the thing that's 
making me crazy - is that Bill is 
right in front of me. Only I can't 
see him...
(touching the case 
file)
Lecter said, everything I need to 
catch him is right here, in these 
pages...

ARDELIA
Lecter said a lot of things.

CLARICE
(shakes her head)
He's here, Ardelia.

Ardelia stares back at her.

SOUND UPCUT - the low throb of a washing machine...

CUT TO:

INT. LAUNDRY ROOM - ACADEMY DORM - NIGHT (VERY LATE)

Clarice has spread out the case file across two washing 
machines. Ardelia, cross-legged on a dryer, studies another 
pile of forms. Nearby is their laundry basket, detergent 
box.

ARDELIA
(surprised)
Hey, is this Lecter's handwriting? 
She holds up the map, with its 
location markings for the kidnapping 
and body dump sites. Clarice takes 
it, looks.

INSERT - THE MAP

with newly inked words in Dr. Lecter's precise, elegant hand.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Clarice, doesn't this random 
scattering of sites seem overdone to 
you? Doesn't it seem desperately 
random - like the elaborations of a 
bad liar? Ta... Hannibal Lecter.

NEW ANGLE - TWO SHOT

as Clarice looks up at Ardelia, puzzled but excited.

CLARICE
"Desperately random." What does he 
mean?

ARDELIA
Not random at all, maybe. Like there's 
some pattern here...?

CLARICE
But there is no pattern. There's no 
connection at all among these places, 
or the computers would've nailed it! 
They're even found in random order.

ARDELIA
Well, except for the one girl.

CLARICE
(beat)
What girl?

ARDELIA
The one that was weighted down. Where 
is she...? Fred something.

They search among the inserts. Clarice finds the graduation 
photo.

CLARICE
Fredrica Bimmel, from Belvedere, 
Ohio. The first girl taken, but the 
third body found... Why?

ARDELIA
'Cause she didn't drift. He weighted 
her down.

CLARICE
But why? He didn't weight the others.

Clarice moves, on fire, unable to keep still.

CLARICE
The first, what the hell did Lecter 
say about... "First principles," he 
said. Simplicity... What does this 
guy do, he "covets." How do we first 
start to covet? "We covet what we 
see -"

She stops, turns. She grabs the photo of Fredrica from 
Ardelia, stares at it. She looks up, trembling.

CLARICE
"- every day."

ARDELIA
(softly)
Hot damn, Clarice.

CLARICE (V.O.)
He knew her...!

CUT TO:

INT. FBI BUILDING - OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR - DAY

Clarice and Crawford are seated in front of Director Burke, 
who's at his desk. Another chair is empty, because Krendler 
is pacing. All four are nearing their boiling points.

CLARICE
Maybe he lives in this, this 
Belvedere, Ohio, too! Maybe he saw 
her every day, and killed her sort 
of spontaneously. Maybe he just meant 
to... give her a 7-Up and talk about 
the choir. But then -

KRENDLER
Starling -

CLARICE
But then he had to cover up, make 
her seem just like all the rest of 
them. That's what Lecter was hinting!

KRENDLER
The market in Lecter hints is way 
down, today, okay? I've got two good 
men dead in Memphis, and three
civilians. I've got -

CRAWFORD
Who the hell's fault is -

KRENDLER
- a U.S. Senator who's half out of 
her head because her daughter's going 
to be murdered today! And all because 
of your mind games with fucking 
Lecter!

CRAWFORD
If you hadn't interfered, he'd still 
be in custody in Baltimore!

BURKE
Jack -

KRENDLER
You sent in a green recruit, with a
phony goddamn offer -

CRAWFORD
You're just trying to cover your ass 
for letting him escape!

BURKE
THAT'S ENOUGH! All of you...

A long silence, as they all struggle to regain composure. 
Crawford, who was at the point of striking Krendler, finally 
retakes his seat. Burke looks sadly at Crawford and Clarice.

BURKE
(very reluctantly)
Starling, I'm afraid I have no choice. 
You're suspended from the Academy.
(Crawford starts to 
interrupt)
Not another word!
(to Clarice)
This is pending a reevaluation of 
your fitness for the service. I 
promise you'll get a fair hearing.
(pause)
Jack... you're ordered to take 
compassionate leave. You'll spend 
the rest of the day briefing the 
AG's office, then transfer command 
of the task force, effective by 1800 
hours.
(beat)
I'm sorry, Jack... Go home. Take 
care of Bella.

Clarice and Crawford stare back at him, drained. A long and 
very painful silence. Not even Krendler looks happy.

CUT TO:

EXT. SIDEWALK OUTSIDE FBI BUILDING - DAY

Clarice and Crawford walk out slowly, stand there a moment, 
not knowing what to say, not wanting to face each other.

CLARICE
All his victims are women... His 
obsession is women, he lives to hunt 
women. But not one women is hunting 
him - except me. I can walk in a 
woman's room and know three times as 
much about her as a man would.
(beat)
I have to go to Belvedere.

CRAWFORD
You heard them. I don't have that 
authority anymore.

CLARICE
You do until six p.m.

He stares at her sadly. He looks, for the first time, 
defeated, old beyond his years.

CRAWFORD
Ohio is cold ground. Picked over, 
ten months ago. Our people worked 
it, so did the locals.

CLARICE
But not from this angle. Not thinking 
he knew her. You've got to send me!

CRAWFORD
I'm Bureau for 28 years, Starling. I 
won't disobey orders, not even now.

CLARICE
But I just became a private citizen. 
I can go anywhere I want to.

CRAWFORD
With ID and a gun...? Impersonating 
a federal agent is a felony.

CLARICE
He's going to kill her, Mr. Crawford. 
This morning, or maybe at noon, but 
today, and Belvedere's our last 
chance. I'm flying there, right now, 
unless you stop me. You want my ID? 
Here - take it...

He stares at her, a long moment. Catherine's life. Clarice's 
passion, and future. His loyalty to the Bureau. Call it.

CRAWFORD
(pulls out his wallet)
There's about $300 here... And a 
hotline code number. They'll patch 
you through to me, wherever I am.

She raises her hand to him. She wants to touch him face, or 
his neck, but can't. Finally she takes his money and card.

CLARICE
Thank you.

He watches, frightened for both of them, as she backs away, 
smiles, then turns, racing towards the surveillance van.

SOUND UPCUT - the scratchy recording of Fats Waller SINGING, 
as we...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (DIM LIGHT)

CLOSE ON the needle of the Victrola, on the spinning record, 
as Mr. Gumb's fingers lift away. MUSIC continues in 
background.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
(calling out)
Preeeeecious...!

CLOSE ON the moth cage, as Mr. Gumb's fingers search through 
the humus, and find a plump new cocoon, lifting it out. The 
door of the cage is left open, and one or two of the adult 
moths flutter out.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
Precious, come on Precious! Busy 
busy day today...

CLOSE ON a clean towel, beside the sink. The cocoon is gently 
placed in readiness alongside four shiny skinning knives.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
Momma's gonna be sooo beautiful!

CLOSE ON a stainless steel Colt Python, with a six-inch 
barrel, as the cylinder is spun, and the hammer gets a 
practice cock. The metallic CLICK is deep and loud. A note 
of alarm has entered Mr. Gumb's voice.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
You come here this minute, you little 
scamp!

LOW ANGLE on Mr. Gumb, wearing the kimono, as he walks through 
his sewing workroom. His back is to us; he is looking 
anxiously under the furniture. He stops, straightens. 
Genuinely scared.

MR. GUMB
Precious...?

LOW ANGLE - OVER THE PIT OPENING

Towards Mr. Gumb, as he stops at one of the doorways of the 
oubliette chamber. He stares inside; his face in shadows.

MR. GUMB
Sweetheart...?

From the distant bottom of the pit, we hear Catherine's voice.

CATHERINE (O.S.)
She'd down here you sack of shit.

Mr. Gumb's fist flies to his mouth, and he sags against the 
doorframe. A little groan escaped him; the dog answers with 
a series of YIPS.

UPWARD ANGLE, FROM THE PIT BOTTOM

as Mr. Gumb's dark shape leans cautiously over the edge.

MR. GUMB
Precious, are you all right?

REVERSE ANGLE ON CATHERINE

crouched to one side, clutching the dog to her chest. Seeing 
Mr. Gumb, the dog squirms frantically, BARKING.

CATHERINE
Get me a telephone. Lower it down to 
me. Do it now, mister! I don't want 
to have to hurt this little dog.

UPWARD ANGLE

on Mr. Gumb, as, with a cry of fury, he whips the Colt from 
inside his kimono. The muzzle gleams as he takes aim.

Catherine yanks the dog up, into his line of fire, screaming 
at him.

CATHERINE
You shoot motherfucker you better 
kill me quick or I'll break her 
fucking neck, I swear to God!

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
(wails)
Nooooooo!

Tucking the dog under one arm, she grabs its muzzle, twisting 
the head. The dog WHINES piteously.

CATHERINE
Back off, you son of a bitch! Back 
off!

UPWARD ANGLE

as Mr. Gumb cries out again - a terrible, inarticulate scream 
of rage and anguish. But then he slowly lowers his gun.

REVERSE ANGLE

On Catherine, as she maintains her grip.

CATHERINE
That's better... Now get me a live 
telephone. Get a long extension and 
lower is down here... And you better 
do it fast, too, 'cause I think her 
leg's broken. She's in pain, mister, 
she needs a vet.

MR. GUMB

stares down at her, a long beat, breathing heavily.

MR. GUMB
You think she's in pain? You don't 
know what pain is. But you're going 
to find out...

And abruptly he vanishes. SOUND of his footsteps, rushing 
off.

CATHERINE

begins shaking, hands and arms twitching uncontrollably. She 
hugs the little dog tight to her chest, buries her face in 
its fur, sobbing...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET - BELVEDERE, OHIO - DAY

HIGH ANGLE as a rented sedan pulls up to the curb, stops. 
After a moment Clarice climbs out, a bit stiffly. Double-
checking this address, she glances up from a folded street 
map to -

AN OLD, THREE-STORY WOODEN HOUSE

in a row of similarly shabby homes, all backing onto a narrow 
river. A path of boards, laid over mud, leads back along 
this house towards the brown water. SOUND of hammering from 
there.

CUT TO:

EXT. BIMMEL HOUSE - BACK YARD - DAY

An awesome huddle of pigeon coops sprawls by the brackish 
water. The birds' COOING mixes with the HAMMERING. A tall, 
gaunt man in a knit cap is obsessively pounding nails into a 
new coop.

CLARICE

approaches him, and the man lowers his hammer. He has red-
rimmed eyes of watery blue. His face is deeply seamed.

CLARICE
Mr. Bimmel...? 

He stares back at her, warily.

CUT TO:

INT. BIMMEL HOUSE - STAIRCASE - DAY

HIGH ANGLE - LOOKING DOWN as Mr. Bimmel leads Clarice up a 
steep flight of steps. The bannister is worn, sags a bit.

MR. BIMMEL
I don't know nothin' new to tell ya. 
The police been back here so many 
times already... Fredrica went into 
Columbus on the bus to see about a 
job. She left the interview OK. She 
never come home.

Clarice pauses, at the landing, to look at a framed photo: 
the familiar graduation portrait. Others pictures show 
Fredrica as a young girl, toddler, infant - plump and hopeful 
at each age.

MR. BIMMEL
Her room's how she left it. Just 
shut the door when you're done.

CUT TO:

INT. FREDRICA'S BEDROOM - DAY

CLARICE'S POV - MOVING SLOWLY as she takes in flowery chintz 
curtains... posters of Madonna and Blondie... a twin bed, 
with worn, stuffed animals on the pillow... a big sewing 
machine in the corner.

CLARICE

turns, absorbing nuances. There is loneliness here, an echo 
of desperation under this steeply pitches ceiling. A shrill 
MEOW, and she looks down...

BIG TORTOISESHELL CAT

is rubbing against her ankles.

CLARICE

picks up the cat, scratches behind his ears. She glances up.

IN A FULL-LENGTH MIRROR

she and the cat stares back at their own reflection...

CUT TO:

CLARICE

sitting at the desk, turns the pages of a high school 
yearbook. The cat is curled on her lap...

CUT TO:

CLARICE

kneeling by the old Decca record player, flips through LPs 
and singles. The cat has wandered off...

CUT TO:

CLARICE

pulling a string to light up the closet. She is surprised 
and intrigued to see an extensive wardrobe, groaning from 
the rod. A shelf above the rod is stacked high with sewing 
supplies, in clear plexiboxes. She flips through the hanging 
clothes, pulls out one dress, on its hanger, for a closer 
look.

THE DRESS

is very big, to fit Fredrica, but beautifully cut. Some of 
the seams still look unfinished. She turns it around, sees a 
blue tissue dressmaker's pattern still pinned to the back.

FAVORING THE SEWING MACHINE

as Clarice turns, looks towards it. She hangs the dress on 
the closet door knob, crosses to sit at the machine. She 
takes off its dust cover. She runs one hand over the cool 
metal, as a taunting memory forms in her mind.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Billy wants to change, too, Clarice. 
But there's the problem of his size, 
you see...

She turns, looks again at the unfinished dress. Suddenly she 
straightens, her attention riveted by something...

CLARICE'S POV

On the printed pattern, down at the lower back of the outlined 
dress, are two bold black triangles. We RUSH CLOSER to there 
shapes, before jumping back to -

CLARICE

who stares at them, starting to tremble.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Even if he were a woman, he'd have 
to be a big one...

IN FLASHBACK

those missing triangles of skin on the dead girl's back, in 
the funeral home in West Virginia...

CLOSE ON CLARICE

as she jumps to her feet, with a fierce joy.

CLARICE
Sewing darts. You bastard.

CUT TO:

INT. BIMMEL PARLOR - DOWNSTAIRS - DAY

Clarice paces, in an exuberant rush, amidst the worn 
furniture.

CLARICE
(into phone)
He's making himself a "woman suit," 
Mr. Crawford - out of real women! 
And he can sew, this guy, he's really
skilled. A dressmaker, or a tailor -

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Starling -

CLARICE
That's why they're all so big - 
because he needs a lot of skin! He 
keeps them alive to starve them awhile - 
to loosen their skin, so that -

CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Starling, we know who he is! And 
where he is. We're on our way now.

CLARICE
(pause; surprised)
Where?

CUT TO:

INT. FBI TURBOJET - FLYING - DAY

Crawford sits at a communications console, with Burroughs, 
in headphones, by his side. This forward section of the cabin 
is crammed with hi-tech equipment, all lit up and WHIRRING. 
Through a window we see clouds, part of the jet's wing.

CRAWFORD
(into speaker phone)
Calumet City, edge of Chicago. I'll 
be on the ground in 45 minutes with 
the Hostage Rescue Team. I'm back in 
charge, Starling. He's mine.

INTERCUTTING

as Clarice reacts; her happiness for Crawford is tinged with 
disappointment at being so suddenly out of the hunt.

CLARICE
(on phone)
Sir, that's great news. But how -

CRAWFORD
Johns Hopkins finally came up with a 
name for us. We fed him into Known 
Offenders, and he came up cherries.
(takes a paper from 
Burroughs)
Subject's name is "Jamie Gumb," AKA 
"John Grant." Lecter's description 
was accurate, he just lied about the 
name.

INSIDE THE JET - MOVING ANGLE

from the rear of the cabin forward, as we slowly PASS the 
twelve-man HRT. They're seated in full gear, hardshell armor, 
quietly checking and rechecking their bulging cases of weapons - 
silencer automatics, shotguns, stun grenades...

CRAWFORD (O.S.)
This Gumb's a real beauty. Slaughtered 
both his grandparents when he was 
twelve, and did nine years in juvenile 
psychiatric. Where, Starling, he 
took vocational rehab, and learned a 
useful trade...

INTERCUTTING

CLARICE
Sewing...

CRAWFORD
Take a bow. Customs had some paper 
on his alias. They stopped a carton 
two years ago at LAX - live 
caterpillars from Surinam. The 
addressee was "John Grant." Calumet 
Power & Light's given us two possible 
residences under that alias. We're 
hitting one, Chicago SWAT's taking 
the other.

CLARICE
(eagerly)
Chicago's only about 400 miles from
here. I could be there in -

CRAWFORD
No, Starling, there isn't time. And 
you've still got crucial work to do 
in Ohio. We want him for murder, not 
kidnapping. I'm counting on you to 
link him to the Bimmel girl, before 
he's indicted.

Clarice tries hard to swallow her disappointment.

CLARICE
Yes sir... I'll do my best.

CRAWFORD
(pause; gently)
Starling - you've earned back your 
place in the Academy. We never 
would've found him without you, and 
nobody's ever going to forget that. 
Least of all me.

CLARICE
Yes sir. Thank you, sir...

CRAWFORD

switches off, feeling bad for her. On the console near him, 
the fax machine starts to CHATTER. He turns, looks.

BURROUGHS (O.S.)
Here he comes, Jack.

CLOSE ON

an emerging sheet, as Gumb's face is printed out. We see 
just his hair, then the top of his forehead, before we...

CUT TO:

EXT. BIMMEL BACK YARD - DAY

Clarice walks slowly across the yard, absorbing all this 
news, before suddenly leaping into the air and pumping her 
fist in triumph, with a happy yelp. Then she sees -

MR. BIMMEL

staring at her in surprise. He sits by his coops, smoking.

CLARICE

somewhat embarrassed, crosses over to him.

CLARICE
Mr. Bimmel... did Fredrica ever 
mention a man named Jamie Gumb, from 
Calumet City? Or John Grant?
(he shakes his head)
Did she know any men that sew?

MR. BIMMEL
She sewed for everybody. Stores, 
ladies, whatever. I don't know about 
men.

CLARICE
Who was her best friend, Mr. Bimmel? 
Who'd she hang out with?

CUT TO:

EXT. AN ISOLATED RUNWAY - O'HARE AIRPORT - DAY

The FBI turbojet is parked, its gangway down. Crawford, 
Burroughs, and the HRT squad, carrying their bags of weapons, 
CLATTER rapidly down the metal steps...

STACY (V.O.)
Freaked me out. Get your skin peeled 
off, is that a bummer...?

CUT TO:

INT. SAVING & LOAN - BELVEDERE - DAY

STACY HUBKA - short, perky, early 20's - sits nervously at 
her desk, talking to Clarice, who jots in her notebook. In 
the background. beyond them, bank tellers, lines of waiting 
customers, MUZAK.

STACY
They said she was just rags, like
somebody -

CLARICE
Stacy, did Fredrica ever mention a 
man named Jamie Gumb? Or John Grant?
(Stacy shakes her 
head)
Do you think she could've had a friend 
you didn't know about?

STACY
No way. She had a guy, I'da known, 
believe me. Sewing was her life, she 
was really great at it. Poor Freddie.

CLARICE
Did you ever work with her?

STACY
Oh sure, me'n Pam Malavesi used to 
help her do alterations for old Mrs. 
Lippman. Lots of people worked for 
her, she had the business from all 
these retail stores? But she was 
like, totally old, it was more'n she 
could handle.

CLARICE
Where does Mrs. Lippman live? I'd 
like to talk to her.

STACY
She died. She went to Florida to 
retire, like two years ago? She dies 
own there.

Clarice reacts, disappointed at the ending of this trail.

STACY
(beat; shyly)
Is that a pretty good job, FBI agent?

CLARICE
I think so.

STACY
You get to travel around and stuff? 
I mean, better places then this?

CLARICE
Sometimes you do.

STACY
Freddie was so happy for me when I 
got this job. This - toaster 
giveaways, and Barry Manilow on the 
speakers all day - she thought this 
was really hot shit. What did she 
know, big dummy...

Suddenly she's fighting tears. Clarice reaches to hug her.

CUT TO:

EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET - CALUMET CITY, ILLINOIS - DAY

WIDE ANGLE on what appears to be, at first, a calm, ordinary 
neighborhood of working class two- and three-story houses. 
But the street is strangely quiet, deserted.

After a few moments, we become aware of movement - armed, 
dark-clad figures creeping swiftly and in silence from shrubs 
to garage corners, from parked cars to porches, appearing 
and then disappearing...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (DIM LIGHT)

CLOSE ON Mr. Gumb, as he settles a big pair of infra-red 
night-vision goggles over his eyes. Moths flutter past his 
face. His mouth is set in a grim line...

CUT TO:

EXT. STREET IN CALUMET CITY - FRONT YARD - DAY

An HRT cop, prone beneath a hedge, is joined by a 2nd HRT 
Cop, who throws himself to the grass beside him. They both 
take aim with their scoped rifles at -

TELEPHOTO ANGLE (WITH RIFLE CROSSHAIRS)

The front door of a big, nearby, split-level house...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (DIM LIGHT)

CLOSE ON a fuse box, as Mr. Gumb reaches in, flips a switch. 
The lights go out. SOUND of a second switch, and the cellar 
is bathed in a green glow...

CUT TO:

EXT. STREET IN CALUMET CITY - NEIGHBOR'S HOUSE - DAY

A little boy, riding his tricycle in his driveway, is suddenly 
startled to find himself staring into the grim face of -

A MEMBER OF THE HRT

crouched by his garage, armed to the teeth. As the little 
boy starts to cry, the cop pulls him into the shadows, 
covering his mouth.

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (GREEN LIGHT)

Mr. Gumb, in his kimono and goggles, creeps silently through 
his workrooms - knees bent, painted toes places ever so 
delicately, the Colt held aloft - as more moths flutter past 
him in the eerie light...

CUT TO:

EXT. STREET IN CALUMENT CITY - DAY

A florist's van turns the corner, comes slowly down the street 
and stops at the curb in front of the split-level. The driver, 
in a gray deliveryman's uniform and cap, climbs out of the 
cab, walks briskly to the panel door, on the street side of 
the van, and slides it open. He leans in, comes out with a 
long, thin red-ribboned floral box, starts calmly towards 
the house...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (GREEN LIGHT)

MR. GUMB'S POV - MOVING ANGLE on the top of the oubliette, a 
glowing green circle in the dark, as it draws closer and 
closer... and then Catherine comes INTO VIEW, at the bottom 
of the pit. She is crouched, exhausted, staring straight up 
at him - but she can't see him in this infra-red darkness. 
Precious is curled into her stomach, asleep. The futon is up 
to Catherine's waist, but there's a clear shot at her head 
and neck.

MR. GUMB

Looking down at her, smiles...

CUT TO:

EXT. STREET IN CALUMET CITY - SUSPECT'S HOUSE - DAY

MOVING ANGLE on the "deliveryman," seen from behind, as he 
mounts three steps to the split-level's front porch. Tucked 
into the small of his back if a 9 mm. automatic.

CRAWFORD AND BURROUGHS

have slipped out of the van, and are crouched behind it now, 
with drawn guns, watching tensely as -

THE "DELIVERYMAN"

settles the floral box in the crook of his left arm, reaches 
out with his right hand towards the buzzer...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY (GREEN LIGHT)

Slowly, savoring the moment, Mr. Gumb aims the big Colt, 
which is already cocked, using both hands... He is just about 
to squeeze the trigger, when we hear his DOOR BUZZER, 
surprisingly loud and close by. He turns, startled, and sees -

DUSTY BLACK METAL BOX

the extension buzzer, mounted high on the wall, which is 
making the hideous, grating JANGLE. It finally stops, but 
not before waking Precious, who starts frantically BARKING, 
off screen, as -

MR. GUMB

raises his gun again, spinning back towards -

HIS POV - THE PIT BOTTOM

where Catherine, hearing but still not seeing him, quickly 
yanks the futon over both herself and the dog. Instantly the 
two of them become one squirming, indistinguishable mass.

MR. GUMB

bites his lip, his aim wavering, as he can't decide where to 
safely place his shot. The maddening BUZZER sounds again, 
even more insistently, and he cries out with frustration and 
fury. But as the BUZZER continues, he reluctantly uncocks 
his gun, looking up angrily towards his front door...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S FRONT DOOR - DAY

The door opens, on a chain, and Clarice peers in, smiling.

CLARICE
Good afternoon... I wonder if you 
could help me. I'm looking for Mrs. 
Lippman's family?

Mr. Gumb frowns out at Clarice. For the first time ever, we 
get a well-lit view of his bland, pale-eyed moon of a face.

MR. GUMB
They don't live here anymore.

CUT TO:

EXT. FRONT DOOR OF SUSPECT'S HOUSE - CALUMET CITY

The "deliveryman" yanks a 12 lb. sledgehammer from the floral 
box, swings it with all his might against the door knob, 
blowing it through as -

MOVING ANGLE

Crawford and Burroughs race towards the door, guns up...

CUT TO:

EXT. MR. GUMB'S FRONT DOOR - DAY

Mr. Gumb starts to close the door, only to have Clarice push 
back against it, politely but firmly. She holds up her ID.

CLARICE
Excuse me, but I really do need to 
talk to you. This was Mrs. Lippman's 
house. Did you know her?

MR. GUMB
(beat)
Just briefly. What's the problem, 
Officer?

CUT TO:

INT. SUSPECT'S HOUSE - CALUMENT CITY - DAY

A bedroom window disintegrates as a flash grenade is shot 
through it, EXPLODING on the floor. An instant later, a black-
clad HRT cop dives through the shattered glass, rolls across 
the floor, comes up on one knee swiveling his sawed-off 
shotgun...

CUT TO:

EXT. MR. GUMB'S FRONT DOOR - DAY

Clarice and Mr. Gumb, still eyeing each other through the 
door crack...

CLARICE
I'm investigating the death of 
Fredrica Bimmel. Who are you, please?

MR. GUMB
Jack Gordon.

CLARICE
Mr. Gordon, did you know Fredrica 
when she worked for Mrs. Lippman?

MR. GUMB
No. Wait... Was she a great, fat 
person? I may have seen her, I'm not 
sure...

CUT TO:

INT. SUSPECT'S HOUSE - CALUMET CITY - DAY

MOVING ANGLE as Burroughs moves quickly down a hallway and 
enters the living room, where Crawford is standing, with his 
gun held down by his side, surrounded by several other cops. 
Burroughs shakes his head: Nothing here...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S FRONT HALLWAY - DAY

Mr. Gumb glances briefly over his shoulder, towards his 
kitchen, then turns back to Clarice with a smile.

MR. GUMB
Mrs. Lippman had a son, maybe he 
could help you. I have his card 
somewhere. Do you mind stepping 
inside, while I looks for it?

CLARICE
Thanks.

ANGLE FAVORING THE COLT PYTHON

which rests on a counter, just inside the open kitchen 
doorway. THROUGH this doorway, we watch as Mr. Gumb, at the 
end of his front hall, slips the chain. Clarice enters, 
closing the door behind her.

CUT TO:

EXT. FRONT YARD OF SUSPECT'S HOUSE - CALUMET CITY - DAY

MOVING ANGLE - towards the front door, as frustrated HRT 
cops file out of the empty house, rifles slung across their 
shoulders.

WE PICK OUT CRAWFORD

walking across the grass towards the van, when all at once 
he stops in his tracks, shaken by a sudden flash of intuition.

CAMERA RUSHES VERY CLOSE

on his stricken face...

CRAWFORD
Clarice.

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S PARLOR - DAY

Clarice, pulling her notebook from her shoulder bag, glances 
around the musty-looking room.

MR. GUMB (O.S.)
That horrible business, I shiver 
every time I think about it...

Overstuffed furniture, porcelain figurines. One archway onto 
the front hall, another onto a dining alcove, and through 
there, the kitchen. Mr. Gumb is crossing to a rolling desk, 
raising the top. He bends over, begins poking through cubby 
holes. His tone is casual, neutral.

MR. GUMB
Are they close to catching somebody, 
do you think?

CLARICE
I think we may be, yes.

Mr. Gumb stiffens, almost imperceptibly. His back is to her, 
as he continues opening drawers, rustling papers.

CLARICE
Mr. Gordon, did you take over this 
place after Mrs. Lippman died?

MR. GUMB
Yes. I bought the house from her, 
two years ago.

CLARICE
Did she leave any records here? Tax 
or business records? Maybe a list of 
employees?

CLOSE ON MR. GUMB'S BACK

as he continues his rummaging.

MR. GUMB
No, nothing at all. Has the FBI 
learned something? Because the police 
here don't seem to have the first 
clue...

Out of the folds of his kimono crawls a Death's-head Moth. 
It creeps slowly to the center of his back, raising its wings.

MR. GUMB
Do you have his description yet, or 
some fingerprints...?

CLARICE

unaware, is still glancing around the room. For several 
agonizing moments, we think she won't see the moth - but 
then she turns, does see it, and her eyes freeze. A beat of 
pure fear. A tremendous struggle to keep her voice calm.

CLARICE
No... no, we don't.

Very carefully, she drops her notebook back into her bag, 
lowers the bag to the floor. With her fingertips she brushes 
back the edge of her blazer, loosening its drape.

MR. GUMB

turns back towards her cheerfully, holding out a business 
card.

MR. GUMB
Ahhh. Here's that number.

CLARICE

keeps her distance. They are about ten feet apart.

CLARICE
Good, thank you. Mr. Gordon, do you 
have a phone I can use?

MR. GUMB

is about to reply when the moth suddenly flies up from behind 
him, flutters past his face. He turns, looking at it. He 
looks back at Clarice, his mouth still open.

HER EYES

are unmoving, locked on his.

HIS EYES

stare back at her, widen. And they know each other.

MR. GUMB
(softly)
In the kitchen. I'll show you.

CLARICE

whips her gun out, gripping it in both shaking hands.

CLARICE
Freeze!

MR. GUMB

slowly tilts his head to one side, smiles at her.

CLARICE

tries to force more authority into her voice.

CLARICE
Okay... Okay, Mr. Gumb, you're under 
arrest. Down on the floor, hands and 
legs spread, move it.

MR. GUMB

turns, then all at once, in two quick steps, he is gone, 
disappearing into his dining alcove, then kitchen.

CLARICE

hesitates, just a split second, to shoot him in the back - 
and then it's too late.

CLARICE
Shit!

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S KITCHEN - DAY

Clarice hurries inside, moving low, swivelling her gun.

HER POV - MOVING

The kitchen is empty. To one side, a door still shuddering 
on its hinges...

CLARICE

rushes to this - pauses - then elbows the door aside, aiming 
her gun down -

AN EMPTY STAIRWELL

brightly lit, leading to the cellar. Two doors facing the 
bottom, both open. No sign of Mr. Gumb.

CLARICE

hates this, hates this, which door, it's a trap, what to do: 
she is very scared, but suddenly hears -

The distant SCREAM of Catherine Martin, somewhere down there 
in that killing maze.

CLARICE

rushes through the doorway, and down the stairs.

BEHIND HER, ON THE KITCHEN COUNTER there's an empty space; 
the Colt Python is gone.

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S CELLAR - DAY

MOVING ANGLE - WITH CLARICE - hurrying down the steps. More 
SCREAMS; they seem to be coming from the left door. Clarice 
goes that way, entering a brick-walled passage - pipes over-
head, naked bulbs. The lighting, though dim, is incandescent; 
Mr. Gumb has switched off his infra-red system. Clarice comes 
to a T-shaped intersection, stops. Another SCREAM, again to 
her left, and the BARKING of a dog...

CLARICE

follows her gun around the corner, looking right.

EMPTY PASSAGEWAY

but doors opening off it - he could be lurking behind any of 
them. She looks left... sees an opening onto some kind of 
chamber. The noises are LOUDER, coming from there.

CLARICE

moves cautiously towards this chamber...

CUT TO:

INT. OUBLIETTE CHAMBER - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

Clarice moves in, hugging the wall, gun swivelling...

HER POV - MOVING

the open top of the pit... beyond it, the other two doorways, 
opening onto this room - Jesus, he could come through either 
one of them, or come up behind her... She moves to the pit, 
looks down, very briefly, sees Catherine SCREAMING, 
hysterical, and a little white dog BARKING...

CLARICE

kneels, staring up from one door to another, she can't cover 
them all, she's totally exposed - and what's a dog doing 
there?

CLARICE
FBI, Catherine, you're safe.

CATHERINE
Safe, SHIT, he's got a gun! Getmeout.
GET ME OUT!

CLARICE
You're all right! Where is he?

CATHERINE
Get me out!

CLARICE
I'll get you out! Just be quiet so I 
can hear. Shut that dog up.
(still swivelling)
Is there a ladder? Is there a rope?

CATHERINE
I don't know! Get me out!!

CLARICE
Catherine. Listen to me. I have to 
find a rope. I have to leave this
room, just for a minute, but -

CATHERINE
NOOOOO! You fucking bitch don't you 
LEAVE ME down here, DON'T YOU - YOU 

CLARICE
Shut UP!
(then, louder)
The other officers will be here any 
minute! you're perfectly safe now!

Ignoring Catherine, whose shouts turn to sobs, she backs 
away, turns, picks one of the other doorways, moves into it 
quickly.

CUT TO:

INT. NEW PASSAGEWAY - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

CLARICE'S POV - MOVING down this passageway, towards a new 
room... pausing at the doorway, straining to hear... no sound 
except Catherine's CRYING, not in the background, and 
Clarice's own RAPID BREATHING. Then she crouches -

LOWER ANGLE - bursts forward, through the doorframe, 
sidestepping...

CUT TO:

INT. WORKROOM - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

Clarice weaves back and forth, half-crouched, gun out, back 
to the wall. Her face glistens with sweat, as she takes in...

HER POV - MOVING NERVOUSLY

Mr. Gumb's sewing machine... his swivel chair... the old 
Victrola... Big moths are crashing into the light bulbs, 
overhead; they're everywhere. Suddenly, from just behind 
her, a CLICK and a HUM, and -

CLARICE

spins, almost shoots, before seeing -

A SMALL REFRIGERATOR

with its thermostat just switching ON.

CLARICE

gasps for breath, fighting for calm. She turns again, slashing 
her free hand at the moths, moving quickly on...

CUT TO:

INT. SKINNING ROOM - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

Clarice moves past the mannequins, all of them naked now... 
then quickly past the huge Chinese armoire, ready to shoot 
into it. Its doors yawn open; it is empty except for several 
padded hangers... She moves on, past the big sink, with its 
DRIPPING faucet... the counter, with its gleaming knives... 
the rows of chemical jars. At the end of this room is

A CLOSED DOOR

Clarice starts to open it, then hesitates. Looking around, 
she seizes a wooden chair, wedges it under the door know, 
sealing off this section of the cellar. With her back thus 
defended, she turns, softly retracing her steps.

CUT TO:

INT. WORKROOM - DAY (DIMLY LIT)

Passing again through the workroom, Clarice pauses, seeing a 
half-curtained door, to one side, that she had previously 
skirted. She crosses to the door, listens and hears no sound 
inside, takes a deep breath and reaches for the knob. She 
twists it, and, as it turns, shoves hard and follows her gun 
inside, all in one quick move...

CUT TO:

INT. BATHROOM - DAY (BRIGHTLY LIT)

An old-fashioned bathroom: tiled floor, sink, toilet - and a 
big, free-standing tub. An opaque shower curtain, suspended 
from an oval ring, hides whatever might be inside.

CLARICE

centers her gun on the curtain, at chest height, and yanks 
it aside with her left hand. No one standing there. Something 
lower down catches her eye.

She leans in, stares more closely, not understanding, at 
first, that she's seeing -

FEMALE HAND AND WRIST

sticking up from the tub, which is filled with hard red-purple 
plaster. The hand is dark and shriveled, with pink nail polish 
and a dainty wristwatch. As -

CLARICE

is reacting with horror to this sight, the lights go out, to 
be replaced, a split-second later, by the eerie green glow 
of Mr. Gumb's infra-red system. Clarice cries out, turns 
blindly, reaching for the door, can't find it, free hand 
clawing desperately into what is, for her, utter darkness. 
SOUND of Catherine KEENING again, in the far distance. Clarice 
stumbles, goes to her knees, rights herself, finally clutches 
the door frame...

CUT TO:

INT. MR. GUMB'S WORKROOM - DAY (GREEN LIGHT)

Clarice emerges from the bathroom in a half-crouch, arms 
out, both hands on the gun, extended just below the level of 
her unseeing eyes. She stops, listens. In her raw-nerved 
darkness, every SOUND is unnaturally magnified - the HUM of 
the refrigerator... the TRICKLE of water... her own terrified 
BREATHING, and Catherine's faraway, echoing SOBS... Moths 
smack against her face and arms. She eases forward, then 
stops again, listens... She eases forward again, following 
her gun, and creeps directly in front of, and then past -

MR. GUMB

who has flattened himself against a wall, arms spread like a 
high priest, Colt in one hand. He wears his goggles and 
kimono, and under that - draping down over his naked arms, 
like some hideous mantle - his terrifying, half-completed 
suit of human skins. This is an exquisite moment for him - a 
ritual of supreme exaltation. He smiles at Clarice as, 
completely unaware, she moves beyond him, exposing her back. 
Very slowly and quietly he steps out behind her, taking his 
gun in both hands, aiming...

CLOSE ON

the Colt Python as - in SLOW MOTION - his thumbs cock the 
hammer, the SOUND registering as a LOUD METALLIC CLICK, and -

CLARICE

spins, still in SLOW MOTION, flame already leaping from her 
gun muzzle, as we see -

THE TWO FIGURES

almost at point-black range, guns ROARING hugely, one FLASH 
from Mr. Gumb, and one two three four FLASHES from Clarice, 
overlapping his, and then, as the ECHOES crash deafeningly -

CLOSE ON CLARICE - LOW ANGLE -

with NORMAL SPEED RESTORED, as the side of her face hits the 
floor, and she is gasping, stunned by the noise and flames; 
there is blood on her check, and an ugly powder burn, but 
she ignores them, twisting to yank her speedloader from her 
jacket pocket, locking it blindly onto her gun's cylinder, 
reloading, right in front of her face, then rolling onto her 
stomach, aiming her gun upward again, blinking her dazzled 
eyes, straining to locate him in the darkness... Where is 
he, where...? Then, as the ECHOES finally fade, she hears 
something else - a tortured, sucking, WHISTLE from perhaps 
eight feet away...

MOVING ANGLE - WITH CLARICE

as she crawls forward, on her elbows, following her gun, 
until it bumps against Mr. Gumb's shoulder. He is lying on 
his back, chest a bloody mess. She slides her muzzle against 
his head, hard, but he doesn't move; another shot isn't 
needed. He stares upwards, through his goggles, bloody lips 
working. He tries to speak, but cannot. One hand reaches 
slowly upwards, the fingers twitching, as if to seize 
something, overhead... Then a final, ghastly groan, his hand 
drops, he is dead. Clarice feels for a pulse at his neck, 
making sure. Then, and only then, does she permit herself to 
roll over, collapsing onto her back beside him.

OVERHEAD ANGLE

down at the two faces - intimately close together, like lovers 
on their pillow. Then, as we PULL SLOWLY AWAY, we see that 
her staring eyes, and his dead gaze, are both locked onto -

A DEATH'S-HEAD MOTH -

perched on an infra-red bulb, overhead, its wings pumping 
slowly.

SOUND UPCUT - wailing SIRENS, many excited VOICES, as we...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. MR. GUMB'S HOUSE - DUSK

The front porch of the tall Victorian house is bathed in a 
glare of TV lights, police and ambulance flashers. Cars and 
vans and even a firetruck choke the street; cops, reporters, 
EMS workers and curious civilians swarm around the ineffective 
barricades. The BUZZ of their voices goes even higher as

CLARICE

dazed, her face bandaged - comes out of the house, walking 
protectively beside Catherine, who is wheeled on a gurney.

They are followed out by uniformed cops, then two firemen 
with an extension ladder. Catherine, blinking in confusion, 
is still clutching the little dog, and refuses to give her 
up even as she's trundled into an ambulance. Clarice sways 
with exhaustion; everyone seems to be shouting at her at 
once, pulling her sleeve. She tries to fight free of them, 
desperate for a familiar face.

AN OHIO HIGHWAY PATROL CAR

pulls up, stops, and Crawford climbs out of the back seat. 
He makes his way anxiously through the press of bodies, 
stopping when he sees Clarice.

THEY LOOK AT ONE ANOTHER

for a long moment, Crawford choked with pride for her, with 
sorrow for her ordeal, with love, but unable to find any 
words. And then he does.

CRAWFORD
Starling... your father sees you.

And then all at once she is sobbing, her knees giving way, 
but he is there to catch her, he is hugging her fiercely. 
HOLD ON them for a long beat.

DIRECTOR BURKE (V.O.)
(over loudspeaker)
Congratulations! You are now officers 
of the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. GROUNDS OF THE FBI ACADEMY - WEEKS LATER - DAY

The forty members of Clarice's class, resplendent in their 
best dark suits and dresses, rise, cheering themselves, then 
turn happily to wave to their audience, as APPLAUSE mounts. 
Beyond them, on a gaily tented platform, the Director stands 
behind his podium.

CLARICE AND ARDELIA

look at one another solemnly. Ardelia holds up both fists, 
in a power shake, and Clarice taps them with her own. She is 
radiantly beautiful in a navy dress and pearls, the thin 
scar on her cheek almost healed. Ardelia turns, waving towards 
the crowd, the Clarice's thoughts are elsewhere. She turns, 
searching among the dignitaries on the platform, till she 
locates

CRAWFORD

who smiles back at her with quiet pride, and offers a little 
salute.

CLARICE

grins - more happy than we've ever seen her - then turns to 
wave towards the crowd with the others.

MOVING ANGLE

over the admiring sea of spectators, several hundred of them, 
still rising from their folding chairs, APPLAUDING in 
celebration of these special young people, this perfect, 
sunlit day.

SOUND UPCUT - rock music, laughter - as we...

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. ACADEMY DORM - REC ROOM - THAT NIGHT

A LOUD party is underway - food, beer, dancing - as the new 
grads celebrate ferociously. Ardelia weaves her way through 
the crowded room, reaches Clarice, who is flanked by her 
special guests - Pilcher and Roden, the two ardent scientists. 
Ardelia has to shout at Clarice over the din.

ARDELIA
Agent Starling! Telephone!

CLARICE
(surprised)
Agent Mapp! Thank you!

She nods to Pilcher, leaves them. Roden, who is quite happily 
drunk, grabs the startled Ardelia around the waist.

RODEN
Hel-lo, gorgeous! Let's get down.

Ardelia looks at Pilcher, confused.

PILCHER
Just ignore him. He's not a Ph.D.

CUT TO:

INT. DORM HALLWAY - NIGHT

Clarice picks up the dangling pay phone, speaks happily.

CLARICE
Starling.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Well, Clarice, have the lambs stopped 
screaming...?

She freezes, stunned by the familiar voice. Then she turns, 
waving frantically towards

ARDELIA

who is just inside the rec room door, at the end of the hall, 
lost in conversation with Pilcher and Roden. Ardelia glances 
at her briefly but misunderstands, waves cheerfully back.

DR. LECTER (V.O.)
Don't bother with a trace, I won't 
be on long enough.

CLARICE

turns back, gripping the phone more tightly.

CLARICE
Where are you, Dr. Lecter?

CUT TO:

EXT. A CLEAR NIGHT SKY

Very beautiful, glittering with countless stars.

DR. LECTER (O.S.)
Where I have a view, Clarice...

MOVING DOWN

we see a rolling lawn, a curving bay. Boats ride at anchor, 
lights shimmering...

DR. LECTER (O.S.)
Orion is looking splendid tonight, 
and Arcturus, the Herdsman, with his 
flock...

DR. LECTER

smiles into his mobile phone. He is stretched out on a 
lounger, on a tiled patio, languidly paring an orange with a 
penknife. His appearance is quite altered - a beard, glasses, 
lighter hair. He's has some cosmetic surgery, as well.

DR. LECTER
(into phone)
Your lambs are still for now, Clarice, 
but not forever... You'll have to 
earn it again and again, this blessed 
silence. Because it's the plight 
that drives you, and the plight will 
never end.

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter -

DR. LECTER
I have no plans to call on you, 
Clarice, the world being more 
interesting with you in it. Be sure 
you extend me the same courtesy.

CLARICE (V.O.)
You know I can't make that promise.

DR. LECTER
Goodbye, Clarice...
(and then, softly)
You looked - so very lovely today, 
in your blue suit.

CUT TO:

INT. DORM HALLWAY - NIGHT

As Clarice reacts, the fill weight of his words sinking in.

CLARICE
Dr. Lecter... Dr. Lecter...!

But only a DIAL TONE comes from the phone. She is still 
staring at her receiver, in shock, as we -

CUT BACK TO:

EXT. THE MOONLIT PATIO

Dr. Lecter sighs, sets his phone down, then rises. Popping 
an orange section into his mouth, he turns towards the 
brightly lit house. Stepping delicately over the sprawled 
body of a uniformed security guard, he walks in through open 
french doors.

CUT TO:

INT. A BOOKLINED STUDY

In a swivel chair, amidst the wreckage of his papers and 
books, is the writhing figure of Dr. Frederick Chilton. The 
extreme intricacy of his bindings recalls Dr. Lecter's own 
former restraints. His screams are muffled by the tape over 
his mouth; he stares at Dr. Lecter like a rabbit trapped in 
headlights.

DR. LECTER

Considers him for a genial moment, then raises the little 
pen-knife. His eyes are twinkling.

DR. LECTER
Well, Dr. Chilton. Shall we begin?


FADE OUT
THE END

 

 

 

Alien  |  Godzilla  |  Silence Lambs  |  Terminator

 

 

 

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