- Shirley Holmes: I'm sorry about Sir Edward dying.
- Peggy Holmes: The ancient Egyptians believed that the Ka, the conscience, lingered in the land of the living after death.
- Chester Stebbings: Our father left a statement that he requested we read. Reg...
- Reg Stebbings: [reading] "Be gracious to me and remove all anger that is in your heart against me. Death is welcome if the curse dies with me."
- Peggy Holmes: Did you feel that? That tremor?
- Reg Stebbings: There have been rumors for years that he stashed a fortune in stolen Egyptian artifacts.
- Peggy Holmes: I'm afraid you sadly underestimate your father's character.
- Reg Stebbings: He gave you the toy and he was just about to tell you where the rest of it was when he... you know. Don't think for a moment that Chester and I are going to allow you to be sole beneficiary.
- Peggy Holmes: Your father spent the last years alone and neglected! I suggest we all spend some time thinking about that.
- Shirley Holmes: What curse was he talking about?
- Chester Stebbings: What?
- Shirley Holmes: Your father - did he think he was cursed?
- Chester Stebbings: Only by nosy children.
- [Shirley is trying to break into Sir Edward's house]
- Bo Sawchuk: No way. It's stunts like this that landed me in a monkey suit at Sussex.
- Shirley Holmes: Bo, those men accused my grandmother of being a thief and a floozy. Are you in or not?
- [Bo breaks the door lock]
- [Bo and Shirley emerge from a tiny dumbwaiter]
- Bo Sawchuk: If we ever do that again - and I hope we don't - I just have one request. Lay off the garlic at lunch.
- Shirley Holmes: Ha. Ha.
- [Shirley is analyzing the special tea her grandmother has been drinking]
- Shirley Holmes: This stuff isn't like any other tea I've ever seen before.
- Bo Sawchuk: You think maybe those guys slipped something into it?
- Shirley Holmes: Wouldn't put it past them. And it would explain why she's been so...
- Bo Sawchuk: Nuts?
- Bo Sawchuk: Well, maybe it's not even the tea. There's an article in here on Sir Edward Stebbings and the tomb of Amenhaten.
- Shirley Holmes: The Boy King - his most famous find. Gran was with him.
- Bo Sawchuk: She was?
- Shirley Holmes: Yeah, why?
- Bo Sawchuk: But it says here there was a curse on anyone who distrubed the tomb and... their families, too.
- Bo Sawchuk: I can't believe I'm graverobbing.
- Shirley Holmes: Sir Edward was the graverobber. We're rescuing what he robbed.
- [reading a gravestone covered with hieroglyphics]
- Shirley Holmes: The dates are in English. Born 1964...
- Bo Sawchuk: Died in 1952?
- Shirley Holmes, Bo Sawchuk: B.C.!
- Peggy Holmes: Amenhaten! Edward spent half his life searching for the Boy King and the other half hiding him.
- Reg Stebbings: [to Chester] See if you can get a charter flight to Cairo - cheaper that way. Although maybe we could arrange to put it on display for a few weeks for a modest admission fee.
- [the room containing Amenhaten's sarcophagus suddenly shakes violently]
- Reg Stebbings: Maybe not.
- [last lines]
- [Shirley puts Amenhaten's toy in a packing case addressed to the Egyptian National Museum in Cairo]
- Shirley Holmes: I prefer to think of Amenhaten, not as a mummy or a king, but as Sir Edward saw him - a 12-year old boy. The ancient Egyptians believe the next word is as real as this one. If that's true, Amenhaten will be needing this wherever he is.