BAILEY BEN GARY GRACE HUNTER MATT BAILEY Ready? Yeah. GRACE No pressure. Okay. GRACE Sweet. GRACE Most mammals are placentals, like us. GRACE So we spend a long time in the womb, and then we come out fully formed. GRACE But ... GRACE Most marsupials are only pregnant for a few weeks then GRACE they grow outside of the mother, in a pouch. BAILEY Right. GRACE Marsupials are mostly nocturnal GRACE which means that they hunt for food at night. GRACE And we have meat-eating carnivores GRACE plant-eating herbivores and GRACE omnivores, which basically just eat whatever they can get. GRACE The wombat, they have this defence mechanism. GRACE It runs head-first into its tunnel GRACE and then the dingo sticks its head in and tries to fight. GRACE The wombat pushes its back up GRACE and crushes the dingo’s head against the roof of the tunnel. BAILEY Little hardarse. (hardarse: slang colloquial vulgar: a tough, uncompromising person; in this case animal) BAILEY I respect that. GRACE But on a serious note GRACE Australia now has more than one hundred endangered species. GRACE And if we don’t get them help now GRACE they’ll become extinct. GRACE It’s Ben, master field biologist. BAILEY Hey! GRACE This is Bailey, the film-maker I told you about. BAILEY They said it might be hard to find a team that wanted to do it so BAILEY I really appreciate it. GRACE Ben was the only one who volunteered. BEN Hey. BEN Look, none of the others would have been any good. Trust me. BAILEY Okay. BAILEY Did you not want to do it, Grace? GRACE I was just nervous about being on camera. BAILEY Oh look, it’s fine. I totally get that. BAILEY So if ever you guys feel uncomfortable BAILEY just tell me and we’ll do something else. BEN Wait, did you already get filmed? GRACE I sounded like a boring know-it-all. BEN It’s just who you are. MATT My name’s Matt. MATT I'm a park ranger. MATT We look after thousands of hectares of forest MATT so I'm on the road a lot. (on the road: driving) MATT But every day there’s always something different happening. BAILEY Okay. MATT We maintain camp grounds MATT control feral animals. MATT And ah ... MATT What else do we fucken do? (fucken: slang colloquial vulgar: many definitions but in this case used as an intensive) BAILEY Um, do you wanna just tell me -- MATT Oh yeah, we keep an eye out for illegal hunting. (keep an eye out: be alert for) MATT And then there’s the bloody greenies (bloody: slang colloquial slightly vulgar: forceful emphasis) (greenies: people aligned with progressive environmental policies, including forest protesters) MATT always getting into it with the loggers. (getting into it: being involved in conflict) MATT And then there’s you lot, from the government (you lot: Grace and Ben) MATT who are always checking in on us. Never stops. BAILEY Don’t you work for the government, Matt? MATT Yeah, don’t be a smartarse about it. (smartarse: slang colloquial vulgar: sarcastic, cheeky person) GRACE Bailey? GRACE You okay? BAILEY Yeah. GRACE He’s got our coordinates, but we can activate the emergency beacon GRACE and send out a distress signal if we need to. BAILEY Love that. GRACE Oh, there’s no reception past here so (reception: mobile phone reception) GRACE we’ve got the satellite phone, but if you wanna (wanna: slang contraction of ‘want to’) GRACE message anyone, you should do it now. BAILEY Nah, I'm good. (nah: slang variation of ‘no’) BAILEY Let’s do it. GRACE Okay. BEN Let’s go. BEN So what were you doing before you decided to follow us around? BAILEY I usually shoot just like corporate stuff, safety videos and whatnot. BAILEY Really exciting things. (sarcastic) BAILEY But then after the fires happened BAILEY I just BAILEY wanted to help make things better, you know? BEN At least I want to feel like I'm trying. GRACE If we play a tiny part in saving one single species GRACE it’ll be worth it. BEN Sure. BEN But ... BEN I also want my contribution to be that I BEN discover a species that’s never been seen before and it gets named after me. BAILEY Amazing. Yeah. GRACE And what if it’s a swamp-dwelling rodent? BEN Hey? BAILEY Yes? BEN If I change my mind about something I say, can I take back permission to use it? (referring to the filming of Ben as part of Bailey’s documentary) BAILEY Yes, you can revoke consent at any time. BEN Right, that’s what you say now and then later on you could be like BEN ‘Oh no, you signed this form, so ...’ BAILEY Yeah, well. BEN And do you have any tips for BEN how to be good on camera, or, you know just like how to be not shit? (shit: in this case meaning amateurish or unprofessional) BAILEY Top tip. BAILEY Try not to sound like your idea of how you think you should sound BAILEY if that makes sense. BAILEY Just use your BAILEY normal, regular talking voice. BEN Right, okay. Just talk like a normal person. BAILEY Yeah, like you're explaining stuff to your friend, who doesn't know anything about science. BAILEY You know, you just don’t BAILEY want to be condescending, is the main thing. BEN Oh! I mean, that’s the best thing about being a scientist. (humorous) BAILEY Okay. BAILEY Tell me about Ben. BEN Yeah, I was one of those kids that was just like obsessed with dinosaurs BAILEY No. (sarcastic) BEN And I had this massive crush on my biology teacher. BAILEY Okay, yep. Right. BEN Not like a sex thing. BAILEY No, that’s, um ... BEN It was a nerdy crush. Like it -- BAILEY I got it. Like a brain crush. BAILEY I totally got it. I just don't know if it’s ... BEN Do you want me to go again? BAILEY I think we’ve got it. BEN So in order to survey the bushfire regrowth area for wildlife BEN we plant four of these at every site (these: cameras) BEN we leave them for a month and BEN they get activated by heat and motion. BAILEY What kind of animals are we looking for? BEN Koalas. BEN Potaroos, a couple of kinds of possums. BEN And another marsupial species that also live in trees. BAILEY How did you end up doing this job, Grace? BAILEY Did you always want to be an ecologist in conservation? GRACE I've always loved animals. GRACE Kind of easier than people. BAILEY Yeah. GRACE I wanted to GRACE use science to help save animals from extinction. GRACE And the work we do is critical to that. GRACE But ... GRACE Seeing how bad things are GRACE can be GRACE overwhelming. BEN So we count them BEN and if we find the right number of target species BEN they can’t log the site. BEN But sometimes we get overruled and they log it anyway. BEN You know then I think BEN if we weren’t out here doing this kind of work BEN all the land will get cleared and all the animals will die and ... BEN Yeah. GRACE We want to help the animals but the thing we have to save them from is us. GRACE It’s the weight of all of that crushes you and GRACE makes you feel helpless. BEN We have to make plans for the future, even if there isn’t gonna be one. GRACE We have to keep going and even when we fail GRACE we have to get up and try again. BAILEY Do you believe that science can save the world? BAILEY Hey, these are pretty chic. (these: the gaiters) (humorous) GRACE These protect you from snakes, spiders, ticks GRACE leeches, bull ants, itchy plants. BAILEY Okay, so quite useful then. BEN Scientist at work. BAILEY What is it? BEN It could be BEN an extremely rare swamp wallaby. GRACE It’s a kangaroo. GRACE We’re scientists, Ben. BEN Yeah, I'm being accurate. I'm doing my ... BAILEY Ahuh. BEN This could also be a swamp-dwelling rodent. GRACE Bennicus Ratticus? (humorous made up Latin name for Ben) BEN That’s exactly it. And I named it after myself. GRACE We record the distribution of species since the fires. BAILEY Yeah. GRACE And then we use the baseline data to track any gradual changes. BAILEY Is there less diversity? GRACE Sometimes there’s more. GRACE If you find animals in new places, it means that they’ve lost their homes. GRACE And that means that they have to move to other animals’ territory. GRACE And these other animals may want to eat them. BEN I mean ... BEN they are coming back. BEN It’s just ... BEN the forest is a lot smaller, so they’re hungry. BEN An hour after sunset is peak feeding time. BEN It’s like ... BEN everyone’s going to the same restaurant at the same time but BEN some of the organisms are going to discover they’re on the BEN specials board. (humorously referring to animals becoming another animal’s prey) GARY Oh! GARY Oh yeah. GARY Excuse you, Goose. GARY What is it? GARY Skitchem! (Skitchem!: nonsense word used to direct a dog to hunt and retrieve) GARY Goose? GARY Goose? GARY Goose! GARY Goose? GARY Goose, get here! HUNTER Goose? GARY Where are you? GARY Bloody dog. (bloody: slang colloquial slightly vulgar: forceful emphasis) GRACE Stop here. BEN Shall we try something else? GRACE Yeah. GRACE Okay. BEN You ready? GRACE Yep. GRACE Can’t believe that worked. BEN That’s a signature owl move. BAILEY That’s so good! Don’t make it lame. GRACE Alright, let’s keep going. GRACE Oh! GRACE Wait! BAILEY What is it? BEN He’s just waking up from a little twenty-hour nap. BAILEY Really? Twenty hours? Yeah. BEN When he grows up he’ll eat for three-and-a-half hours and then he might BEN squeeze in half an hour of BEN screaming and grunting to try and get a girlfriend. GRACE Like you on the weekends. (humorous) BAILEY Ouch. GRACE Do you want a go? BAILEY Yeah! BAILEY Oh! BAILEY Look, there’s something there! BAILEY You see it? BAILEY Was. BAILEY It’s gone. BAILEY Oh! BAILEY Sorry. BEN Shh! Sorry. GRACE So ... BEN Put down possible morepork. BEN Those owls have been sighted on the mainland. GRACE I'm going to put unidentified. BEN I had so many animals when I was a kid. BEN I mostly just bred mice. BEN It was like a little God complex thing, I think (God complex: the belief that one holds power over all living things) BEN that parents force on their children BEN to teach them about the world. BAILEY Oh, man. It’s crazy. Um -- GRACE Teach them about death. Yeah, pretty much. GRACE Yeah. Oh. BAILEY When I was a kid BAILEY I went on this school excursion to the zoo, and BAILEY I kind of wandered away from the group BAILEY to check out this really cool gorilla. BAILEY I'm like looking down, with all these kids and families. BAILEY We see this little furry creature BAILEY about the size of a cat. BAILEY I guess somehow it just BAILEY escaped wherever it lives in the zoo and it’s found its way in with the gorilla. BAILEY And all the kids are like, ‘Oh, look at that little fluffy thing!’ BAILEY Then the gorilla looks over and it takes him one second to catch it BAILEY and shows it to the crowd. BAILEY And then he just starts fucking (fucking: slang colloquial vulgar: many definitions but in this case used as an intensive) BAILEY beating it BAILEY against a rock until it died. BAILEY The kids are screaming and parents are trying to drag them away. BAILEY And then he holds up the little dead animal BAILEY and he starts pounding on his chest. BAILEY It was like he was saying BAILEY ‘Fuck you! If you want to put me in a cage, then (fuck you: slang colloquial vulgar: aggressive expression of extreme frustration or anger, directed at another person BAILEY you have to see who I really am.’ BAILEY I was so rattled. (rattled: disquieted, unnerved, shaken) BAILEY My heart was pounding out of my chest and I remember the zookeeper guy BAILEY walked past me and I grabbed him by his sleeve and I was like BAILEY ‘You gotta go in there. You gotta do something. This is this isn’t right.’ BAILEY And he just looked at me and he just shrugged his shoulders and he said BAILEY ‘I'm not going in there.’ BAILEY That’s his territory. BAILEY Hey! BAILEY Hey Grace. BAILEY Grace. GRACE I'm sorry. BAILEY What’s that? GRACE It’s just an expressive possum. BAILEY Oh, of course. BAILEY Okay, cool. Thanks. BEN Ah ... BEN It’s a brush-tail. BAILEY Brush-tail. BEN Oh, and that’s a sugar glider. GRACE Do you wanna sleep in here? BEN Go on. BAILEY Yeah. Oh, okay. BAILEY Thanks. BAILEY Sorry. BEN It’s a southern boobook! GRACE I'm sorry, he’s so annoying. BAILEY I like him. BAILEY He’s like a kid who wants to show you all his tricks. BAILEY It’s none of my business, but how do your partners feel BAILEY about you guys going on these trips for work? GRACE My ex was fine with it. GRACE And Ben hasn’t had a relationship since GRACE like ever. BAILEY Really? GRACE Sorry. BAILEY No, it’s okay. BAILEY My brother. GRACE Oh. BAILEY He’s not here anymore. (not here anymore: is dead) BAILEY The fires last year. GRACE I'm so sorry. BAILEY Thank you. BAILEY He would have liked you guys. (you guys: Grace and Ben) BAILEY And loved what we’re doing out here. BAILEY What is that? GRACE It’s just a koala. BAILEY Just a koala. GRACE Goodnight. BEN Did you sleep okay? GRACE No. GRACE Did you hear that koel bird? BEN Ah, yeah. BEN It was just whistling his little heart out, trying to meet someone. GRACE He sounded like his head was going to explode. BEN That’s exactly what it’s like. GRACE Are you in need of some short-term pair bonding? BEN I mean, I am kind of amazing at whistling, so ... BAILEY Hey. BEN Hey. BEN How was your walk? BAILEY Oh, it was amazing. BAILEY So what's going on today? GRACE We’re retrieving some cameras that were left behind by another team. GRACE That’s still happening, isn’t it? BEN Yeah, yeah. BAILEY Yeah, right. Good, good. I will break down this tent. BAILEY Does it tell you the exact spot? GRACE It pinpoints within ten metres. BEN Okay, should be somewhere around ... BEN Ah, here! BAILEY Do you watch it straight away? GRACE We don’t have to, but I always want to. BEN Alright. BEN Let’s find the others and see what we’ve got. GRACE I'm always desperately hoping that we find GRACE a thriving population of something rare and endangered. GRACE It’s a feral cat. GRACE I mean, I try not to think of any animals as bad. GRACE It’s not their fault that they prey on native wildlife. GRACE It’s our fault for bringing them here. BAILEY Ooh, is that a brush-tail? Yeah. BEN One of the least endangered species, unfortunately. BAILEY Look at those little beady eyes. GRACE Rabbits and rodents. BEN Not even endangered rodents. BEN I got it. BAILEY We could probably just move it, no? GRACE He has to use all of his tools every trip or he feels ripped off. BAILEY Oh. BEN Thank you. BAILEY It’s a beautiful job. GRACE These old growth forests are getting rarer and rarer. BAILEY These trees are so beautiful. GRACE If we don’t find something endangered soon, we could lose this whole forest. GRACE A hollow-bearing tree just like this one supports a diverse range of animals. GRACE If the tree is removed GRACE then it can be the final determinant in the extinction of a local population. GRACE And the extinction of one species GRACE can affect the survival of like a whole lot of other species. BAILEY So fairly important, then. (wryly) BAILEY Man, can we sit for a bit? BEN Can I borrow your shovel? GRACE Do you also need to borrow my toilet paper? BAILEY Quaint. GRACE Gold mining was the only way to get rich GRACE so people came out here and built these little houses and just started digging. BAILEY Can you even imagine that way of life? GRACE Actually, no. GRACE And now we have to watch out for random holes in the ground. BAILEY Random holes. Mm-hmm. (random holes: caused by gold-miners digging) BEN Guys. BEN Can we get going? BEN Almost there. BEN Jesus. (Jesus: slang colloquial vulgar: expression of shock, anger or fear) GRACE You should have got that on camera. BAILEY Dammit! GRACE Are you alright, mate? GRACE You bleeding? BEN Ah, yeah. It’s a stream. You see? BEN You're next. BEN GPS signal is getting ropey. (GPS: acronym: Global Positioning Satellite, a way of using satellites to pinpoint a geographical location) (ropey: patchy, intermittent) BEN I need a better view. BEN Should be somewhere around here. BAILEY It’s so green. BEN Oh, come on. BEN Bloody hell. (bloody hell: slang colloquial slightly vulgar: mild expression of shock, anger or frustration) GRACE Oh, whoa. BEN Again. BEN This keeps happening. BEN Whoa. BAILEY Oh! What the ... Jesus. (Jesus: slang colloquial vulgar: expression of shock, anger or fear) BAILEY Oh my God. BEN Looks like somebody’s been having a nice dinner. BEN Wow, look. BEN This bone’s been chewed on. BAILEY By what? What do you think’s been chewing on it? BEN It could be feral pigs, wild dogs, dingoes. GRACE The colour’s variated. GRACE It could be from more than one animal and they got into a fight or GRACE it could be from one animal with camouflage markings. BEN Looks like these branches have fallen down. BEN There’s been some kind of struggle. BEN This paw print. BEN Do you have the plaster? GRACE Did you put it back in my pack? BEN You know what? BEN Let’s just see if we got it on camera, hey? BEN And ... BEN It’s in still mode. (still mode: whereby a camera produces single frame still shots as opposed to continuous video footage) BEN Looks like it stopped recording three weeks ago. GRACE Can you see anything? BEN We got birds. BEN We got some mice. BEN Got an echidna. BEN Ooh! BEN A bush rat. BEN Look at him go. BEN Okay. Oh, hello. GRACE A yellow-footed rock wallaby. BAILEY Are they rare? GRACE Very rare. BEN Oh. BEN Oh. GRACE What? BEN Ah. What? BEN Okay. No, no, no. Just go ... BEN Yeah, yeah. No, go back to -- BEN Alright, just stop it. BEN Give me a sec. (sec: slang contraction of ‘second’) BAILEY What’s happened here? BEN I don't know. BEN What is it? GRACE We should call the ranger. BEN No, the photos are old. It’s probably moved on since the bait ran out. GRACE We’re supposed to notify him if we see any evidence of feral animals. BEN Yeah, well maybe it’s not a feral animal. BEN I don't know, maybe it was a human. BAILEY It’s a long way to fall. BEN Somebody could be out there crawling around with a broken spine. GRACE And if it was you stuck out here with a broken spine, what would you want us to do? BEN Oh, mate, I'd be fine. I'd just BEN eat some bugs. BEN Drink a bit of urine. (humorous) MATT It’s a lovely day to be on the course, ladies and gentlemen. MATT Like a champion. MATT Sliced it. MATT Look, I'm ... MATT I'm kind of in the middle of something right now. (in the middle of something: occupied, busy) MATT Right. MATT Well you just sit tight (sit tight: wait) MATT and I'll come and see you. MATT Anyone’s up to anything dodgy in my jurisdiction, they’ll have some pretty hefty fines to pay. (dodgy: illegal, unethical behaviour) MATT Oh, did you get yourself into a bit of trouble, did you? MATT Right. MATT Yeah, well that’s what they all say. MATT Yeah, well I don't mind getting myself into a bit of argy-bargy. (argy-bargy: slang colloquial: conflict, argument) MATT Makes the day fun. MATT Gotcha. (gotcha: slang contraction of ‘got you’) BEN I'll send you the coordinates. MATT Righto. (righto: slang variation of ‘alright’) MATT I'll come and find you. BEN Yeah, for sure. MATT Yeah. Ah ... Yeah. MATT Thanks. Bye. MATT No worries Ben -- GRACE He’s probably lonely. GRACE They should make it so everyone gets a partner. GRACE I mean, can you imagine if we had to do this job by ourselves? GRACE What? BAILEY Hey guys. BAILEY Come check this out real quick. BAILEY Look at these. GRACE Can you see it? Look at these scratches here. BAILEY See those? GRACE That’s claw marks. GRACE What! What? BEN Look at that. BEN Two thumbs. GRACE Some marsupials have them for climbing and hunting. BEN Have we got any bait left? GRACE No. BEN It was hunting here because we gave it a handy little food source. GRACE So you want to lure more unsuspecting animals to their deaths? BEN In the name of science. BEN You know for a fact Matt will kill it if we can’t ID it. (ID: acronym: identify) BEN Here we go. BAILEY Yes! MATT What’s all this about? MATT Hello? BEN Guys. BEN I think I know what it is. BAILEY Carni-what? BEN It’s a large carnivorous marsupial BEN and it’s arboreal, which is consistent with the colour variation of the fur we found. GRACE Whatever scratched up that tree has two thumbs. GRACE Your megafauna carnifex only has one thumb. BEN Maybe it’s a sub-species. GRACE Sure. BEN The Somali elephant shrew, yeah? BEN It was thought to be extinct BEN and they found a bunch of them living in the desert. GRACE The elephant shrew wasn't seen for fifty years. GRACE Thylacoleo carnifex hasn’t been seen for fifty thousand years. BEN Well, maybe they’ve been living out in the forest BEN peacefully killing things for dozens of years. BEN And then the bushfires completely ravage their ecosystem BEN so they’re forced to move to new territory, closer to humans. BEN Look, the history of evolution tells us that BEN life finds a way. BAILEY Guys! BAILEY I have no idea what you're talking about. GRACE It’s the thing drop-bears are based on. (drop-bears: hoax in contemporary Australian folklore featuring a predatory, carnivorous version of the koala. This imaginary animal is commonly spoken about in tall tales designed to scare tourists) BAILEY I thought that was just a made-up story to scare tourists. GRACE It is. BEN Yeah, but it’s based on a real creature and it’s nothing like a bear. BAILEY We’re not in ... BAILEY We’re not in danger? BAILEY Well I don't know! BEN I don't know why you're laughing. GRACE Oh my God. MATT Settle. MATT Yeah. MATT Good dog. BAILEY Alright. BAILEY Rolling. Okay. BAILEY So ... BEN In ancient Rome BEN the public executioner was called the Carnifex BEN and that literally translates to ‘the maker of meat.’ BEN Then you wind it back a few million years BEN to the last days of the dinosaurs BEN the ancient ancestors of marsupials were actually much bigger than they are now BEN and T. Carnifex was one of those animals. BEN It’s highly territorial BEN so if you stray into its hunting ground, it will kill you. BEN But it’s not just gonna chase you across open ground like a lion. BEN Oh, no, no, no. BEN They’re an ambush predator, and that means that they will hunt you. BEN Stalk you. BEN In the forest. BEN Like a tiger. BEN And then they’ll jump you. GRACE Oh my God. BEN It bites down through your jugular. BEN It severs your spinal cord. BAILEY Holy shit! (holy shit: slang colloquial: expression of shock or surprise) BAILEY Wait, how did that ever die out? BEN Well ... BEN the currently accepted science is that it was naturally occurring climate change. BAILEY Yeah, right. BAILEY So ... BAILEY Where’s old mate? (old mate: Matt) BAILEY Do we know? GRACE Did you check the coordinates? GRACE He might be in the wrong place. BEN Yeah, I checked. GRACE So call him. BEN I'll message. BEN Sure, just for you. GRACE What did you say? BEN Don't worry, didn’t tell him about my genius megafauna theory. BEN I said ... BEN we think it’s a native species, so if he sees anything, don’t kill it. BEN Did you hear that? BAILEY Huh? BEN Grace? BEN There’s something moving out there. BAILEY What is it? BEN I don't know. Can’t see. GRACE Yeah. GRACE Got the spotlight. BEN No, no, no, it might run away. Just hang on. BAILEY Oh Ben! BEN God’s sake. (God’s sake: expression of mild surprise, shock or annoyance) BAILEY Never been happier to see a goat in my entire life. BEN You know, feral goats erode the soil and reduce plant diversity. GRACE Oh Ben, not now. Jeez. (jeez: slang colloquial: expression of exasperation) BEN It’s true. BEN I'm just saying, it’s nothing to celebrate. BAILEY It kind of is for me, actually. BEN No, no, I'm not trying to be at you or anything. I'm just saying BAILEY Yeah. You know ... BAILEY Okay. Sweet. BEN Did you hear that? GRACE Oh my God. BEN Whoa. BAILEY What the fuck is that? (what the fuck: slang colloquial vulgar: expression of utmost shock or surprise) GRACE We have to get closer to ID it. BEN This is historic. I mean, we’re gonna be in biology books. GRACE It’s unbelievable. BEN Okay. Oh my God. GRACE It could be the last of its species. BEN I bet it’s a sub-species. GRACE Whatever it is GRACE we could get this entire forest protected. BEN Oh my God. BEN What’s it doing? GRACE Maybe it’s eating? GRACE Or hiding its food? BEN Whoo, okay. Oh my God. GRACE It’s like a leopard. It stows its prey. BEN Hey Bailey! BEN Ready? BAILEY We’re good to go. BAILEY Okay. BAILEY Okay, coming around. BEN Okay, bring it in, but slow. BAILEY Yep. Slowly. GRACE It needs to go higher. BEN Really don’t want to scare it. BEN Keep going. BEN Almost there. BAILEY Yeah, just tell me if I'm getting too close. BEN Yep, okay. Yep, yep. GRACE Careful. BEN You see that? BAILEY We’re getting too close. BEN Just hover it right next to it. BAILEY Ben, we’re gonna freak it out. (freak it out: terrify, cause something to panic) GRACE She’s right. GRACE It’s moving. GRACE Shit. No. BEN Oh no! GRACE It’s gone. BEN No, we can’t -Shit! (shit: slang colloquial slightly vulgar: expression of shock, dismay or anger) GRACE Where -No! GRACE Stay here. GRACE Ben! Wait! GRACE Ben! GRACE Ben! GRACE Ben! GRACE Come on! BEN Grace? BEN Grace? BEN Shit! BEN Fuck! (fuck: slang colloquial slightly vulgar: expression of shock, dismay or anger) BEN You okay? BEN No, no, don’t move. BEN I'll come down. GRACE Then we’ll both get stuck in here. Just get the rope. BEN No, that’ll take way too long. BEN Hold on a sec. BEN Your chariot has arrived. (humorous) GRACE This isn’t you rescuing me. GRACE It’s your fault I'm down here. GRACE When we get out of here, we should -- GRACE Ben? GRACE Ben? GRACE Ben! GRACE Ben! BAILEY Stay away, stay away, stay away, stay away, stay away! BAILEY Grace. BAILEY Grace! BAILEY Hello? BAILEY Hello! BAILEY Oh my God! BAILEY Keys, key, key, keys! BAILEY Fuck! BAILEY Okay. BAILEY Fuck! BAILEY Okay. BAILEY Hey. Hey! BAILEY Hey buddy! BAILEY Hey, you wanna get in? BAILEY Come on. BAILEY Come on! BAILEY Come on! BAILEY Come on. Come on, hop up! Hop up! Good girl. BAILEY Hey, what’s that? BAILEY Hey? BAILEY Hey, buddy. BAILEY Hey. BAILEY What's your name? BAILEY Goose. BAILEY Hi, Goose. BAILEY Hey. BAILEY I'm Bailey. BAILEY What do we do now? BAILEY Maybe your person will come and find us. BAILEY You just stay with me. BAILEY It’s okay. BEN Okay. BAILEY It’s okay. It’s okay. BAILEY Come on. BAILEY Shit! BAILEY It’s okay. BAILEY What is it? What is it? What is it? BAILEY It’s okay, it’s okay. Don't worry. BAILEY It’s okay. BAILEY It’s okay. BAILEY It’s okay. BAILEY Oh my God! GRACE Ben is out there. GRACE He’s out there. GRACE We have to go. We have to go. GRACE Let’s go. Let’s go! GRACE Here! GRACE It’s Ben’s! GRACE Run! GRACE Goose! GRACE Where’s Goose? GRACE We have to get out of its territory. GRACE Here. GRACE You drive. I'll call for help. BAILEY Goose! GRACE Come. Goose! GRACE Here. Good dog. BAILEY Okay. GRACE Now they can find us. BAILEY Let’s go. GRACE Just keep it steady. BAILEY Okay. Oh fuck! BAILEY Fuck! GRACE Give it more power. BAILEY Come on! GRACE Come on! It’s okay. BAILEY Goose? BAILEY Oh fuck! Goose! GRACE Jump in. GRACE We have to get it moving. GRACE We have to go! GRACE Keep going! GRACE Keep going. GRACE Gently! GRACE Bailey! BAILEY Get in! BAILEY Get in! BAILEY Grace! BAILEY No! GRACE Get back. GRACE Goose! GRACE One shot. BAILEY It’s gone, Grace. BAILEY It’s gone.