- Lorraine Peters, who's writing a book about the Whitechapel murders, visits 1888 London to get the proof she needs, only to place dozens of people in danger; Stanley Hocker, who has no self-confidence around women, asks to become a gigolo.
- "With Affection, Jack the Ripper": For years Lorraine Peters has been researching the London Whitechapel murders of 1888, and is pretty sure she knows who Jack the Ripper really was. All she needs is proof in order to publish her book on the subject -- and to get it, she wants to go back in time to collect physical evidence from the man she suspects was the killer. Roarke issues several dire warnings to no avail. Reluctantly he sends Lorraine through a special door, warning her to make note of its location or be lost in the past forever. It doesn't take Lorraine very long to find what she's looking for; she finagles her way into Dr. Albert Fell's offices, finds incriminating newspaper clippings and a diary in his desk, and takes them with her, intending to return to the present day. But she's been shadowed all the way by the suspicious doctor, and all that saves her is the arrival of the police, responding to a murder Fell committed during his trailing of Lorraine. Lorraine is caught in the mass of witnesses who are herded to the police station for overnight questioning, and Fell takes the opportunity to slip through the special door. Bewildered at first by the futuristic contraptions in Roarke's study, he soon finds he's in a place with an abundance of potential victims. When Lorraine finally returns the next morning, Roarke and Tattoo ask questions, show her a cape and hat and a blood-speckled glove (shades of O.J. Simpson 14 years later!) that Fell left behind in the study, and realize that the killer is at large on the island. Though Fell stalks women all day, Roarke and Tattoo have taken precautions; but Fell finally tracks down Lorraine and tries to dispatch her. Witnesses chase him off, and Lorraine retreats to her bungalow -- only to be caught by Fell, who drags her back through the time-travel door to London where he intends to murder her and retrieve his property. But Roarke has anticipated him and stops him; something in Roarke's hard glare terrifies Fell into fleeing and he is killed by a horse and carriage. Shaken, Lorraine decides not to publish her book after all; she feels it's enough that she knows the truth. "Gigolo": Stanley Hocker -- whom Tattoo pegs as a wimp the moment he steps off the plane -- wants for once to be noticed and admired by women. So Roarke assists him by outfitting him with a magic bracelet taken directly from a painting of Don Juan, and Stanley hits the ground running. No sooner is he at the local dance club than women are hanging all over him, giving him the keys to their bungalows and hotel rooms. After he orders endless champagne for his new admirers, he catches the attention of Monty, a suave, oily character who turns out to be a professional "escort" -- i.e., a gigolo. Apparently Stanley doesn't fully understand the meaning of the word; he thinks Monty's one cool operator. Monty bails Stanley out by paying the $700 champagne bill he racked up; in return, Monty gets Stanley to take his place as escort to the ultra-rich Jessie DeWinter, while Monty cozies up to her niece, Dina. But Stanley is strongly attracted to Dina, and when Monty shows up for a group picnic looking the way Stanley does in his real life, Stanley gets suspicious and demands some answers. To his disgust, Monty was supposed to be Jessie's escort, but Dina is as rich as her aunt and much younger -- therefore assuring many years of support for Monty. Stanley tries to tell Dina, but she won't listen to him. He goes to Roarke and complains; Roarke notes that he's learned that women are not just objects to hang off a man like Christmas-tree ornaments, but have feelings and status of their own. Chastened, Stanley relinquishes the Don Juan bracelet and presents himself to Jessie, Dina and Monty as his real self. Monty sees his scheme about to be blown and tries to stop Stanley, but Stanley sticks to his guns, repays the $700 and enrages Monty into revealing his true colors. Dina flees in tears; Jessie takes a shine to the somewhat battered Monty, and Stanley hurries after Dina, telling her the complete truth about himself -- and finding to his surprise that Dina likes him as his bumbling, tongue-tied self, and not the suave loverboy he once wanted to be.
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