The Watcher (2022) s01e05 Episode Script
Occam's Razor
[piano music playing]
No.
[sighs wearily]
[phone dialing]
[Tammy] Tides Motor Inn. This is Tammy.
Hello? Anyone there?
[ends call]
[line ringing]
[Theodora] Hello.
Uh, yeah, this is Nora Brannock
and, um I need to see you right away.
[honking]
[siren blaring]
- [doorbell chiming]
- [Theodora] Nora, how are you?
Not great.
I suppose Dean's told you that
he's not staying at the house right now.
Yeah. The girl in the video
in the bedroom.
He told me
that he doesn't know who she is.
Says he didn't sleep with her.
Hmm. That's what he told me, too.
And do you believe him?
I mean, I did.
Just doesn't seem like him.
I have to say, I like Dean a great deal.
But that video
Your bedroom,
a 17-year-old girl in pigtails
It kind of speaks for itself.
What?
That word, "pigtails."
What about it?
It's just so specific,
and I just heard my friend Karen
say it at the club a few weeks ago
and now you too.
Before that
I don't think I heard it for 20 years.
But that's not
what you called me about, is it?
No.
So, I wanted to look at his phone records,
so I could see if maybe
there was a number I didn't recognize.
Hers. The girl.
There wasn't anything on his cell phone,
so I thought, "Shit,
maybe he called her from the house."
"From the landline."
But that's not what I found.
Do you remember when we told you
that I got a call at the motel
when I was there by myself with the kids?
- Hello?
- [heavy breathing]
It was about 1:00 a.m
Hello?
- I remember.
- [hangs up]
So I checked the phone log,
and there it is.
Right there.
1:04 a.m. to the motel from our landline.
Holy shit.
Miss Birch, I think my husband's
the one writing those letters.
I think he freaked out.
We couldn't afford the house,
so he wanted out, but he couldn't tell me.
So he thinks, "If I can just scare her,
just enough,
she'll want to sell the house."
I think it's Dean. He's The Watcher.
[knocking at door]
Hi! I'm Karen.
Karen Calhoun from Darren Dunn Realty.
Can we have a little chat?
I mean, the rumors are swirling
and, uh, I just want you to know that
I'm not going to ask
for any of the details, okay?
My husband and I
aren't ready to talk about it.
Do you understand?
Mm-hmm. Which is why I said that I'm not
going to ask for any of the details.
Yeah.
I mean, even if you wanted me
to know what actually did happen,
like, who were the bodies
You know, I would just say,
"Uh-uh. Please, I don't want to hear it."
You know? [chuckles]
We don't want to talk about it.
Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah, well, look here, uh
You know, I'm in real estate, right?
And I just want to say your house
your house is an absolute stunner
and you're directly across the street
from the real prize.
Nora and Dean's house is just spectacular,
and everybody wants that house.
Anyway, can I just take
a little moment here
and just say congratulations
for taking such good care
of this amazing little nest egg,
because I know that you both are
of a certain age and, you know
I know you have
that condo down in Florida.
How do you know that?
You're probably mulling over in your head,
like, "When are we going to flap
our little snowbird wings
and move down there for good?"
You don't know that.
Well, what I do know is
that your house is now
what we call a stigmatized property.
It's because of the murders.
It's just your house is probably going
to go for way less than asking.
As much as 50%.
So, what do you want?
I would like to sell your house for you.
We're not listing it.
Well, you don't have to. Just
You just sell it to me.
Do you know Darren Dunn
of Darren Dunn Realty?
That's my boss.
And, well, what we do is we work together,
we set up an LLC and then we buy houses,
and then we flip them.
And people are always really happy.
My family is going through
a very difficult time. You can see that.
Have you no empathy, no dignity?
[chuckling] I get what I want, you know?
[door slams]
[tense music playing]
You were smart to come to me, Nora.
I spoke to my contact at the bureau.
He knows a handwriting analyst.
A guy he trusts.
I showed this guy the third envelope,
and the photos of the first two,
and the samples you gave me,
of Dean's handwriting,
birthday cards, valentines.
Now, he warned me
that it's not the best sample.
We've got 30 letters,
eight numbers, a slash and a comma.
Not a lot to work with, right?
Now, he couldn't say whether all of these
letters were written by one person.
They're obviously similar,
but there's enough variance in a couple
of the pen strokes between envelopes.
See, these two lines here, for instance.
One is an up stroke
and the other is a downstroke,
so he can't tell whether it's one person
who has two ways of writing a slash
or whether there's
a second person copying the first.
But here's something that he did notice.
Third envelope.
See the K in "Brannock"?
See that loop?
He said, in his experience
[clears throat]
only about one in ten people do that.
Look here.
Your husband
usually doesn't write in all caps,
but he did write in all caps
on Valentine's Day five years ago.
The last line reads,
"I love you, Mrs. Brannock."
Look at that last K.
Now, I couldn't pin this guy down.
He kept going on
about how this wasn't a good sample.
But I asked him, just his opinion,
what the likelihood was
that the person who wrote that valentine
also wrote the words on that envelope.
What did he say?
He said he was 70% to 80% certain it was.
[sighs]
Why would he do this to his own family?
If this was his dream home.
He was excited about the kitchen,
the town It's not like I forced him.
He was just as enthusiastic as I was.
[Theodora] He may have wanted
to please you, Nora.
I think he still does and that's why
he can't come out and admit it.
I think he got in too deep.
He thought he could afford something,
then realized that he couldn't.
In fact, I know that's what happened.
What?
I went to the bank
where you got your loan.
I talked to the guy, off the record.
His friend, Steve,
he told me about the hoops
he had to jump through with his boss
to get you that house.
Dean cashed out just about
every investment to secure that loan.
Stocks, bonds, your IRA.
But you had to have known that, right?
Because you had to have signed off on it.
Well, I I guess I
There were a lot of things to sign
Okay. That's all Yeah, one more.
and I guess I didn't read
the fine print
What are these?
Uh, this is just some IRA stuff.
The Roth. Just sign there, initial there.
and let him take charge.
Yeah.
And
And I knew I knew all of our money
was going into the house. I
Literally all of your money, Nora.
Except your AMEX card
and a checking account
with about ten grand in it.
So, when you decided to renovate
the kitchen and the basement
on top of the mortgage,
the money really wasn't there.
So he goes back to his friend Steve.
But, Steve, he said, "There is no way
I can approve a second loan."
"But, you know, there are some folks
who could lend you some money,
as long as you pay them back."
That wasn't a refi, Nora.
That was a high-interest loan on $150,000.
What the fuck.
I know. It is a lot.
[Nora] Okay, hold on.
This is only a problem
until he makes partner, right?
Sweetie
Dean got passed over for partner.
- When?
- I don't know.
He told Steve a few weeks ago,
but Steve isn't exactly sure
when it happened.
So, suddenly, not only does Dean realize
he's bought a house that he can't afford,
he now has a high-interest loan
from some shady people
and there is no way
he's going to be able to pay them
anytime soon.
He needed a way out.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Nora, I am so sorry
that we had to find out this way.
[sighs]
But I have to
tell you something, sweetheart.
We now know who The Watcher is.
[car passing]
Hey, Andrew.
What's Where are you going?
Where the fuck are you going?
Hey! Hey, motherfucker!
[honking]
[both grunting]
- The fuck. Let me go!
- It's fine!
Everything's fine!
Why are you running away from me, bro?
Why are you chasing me?
- Because you lied to me.
- No, I didn't!
You lied to me. You're an actor.
- You didn't tell me you were an actor.
- You didn't ask!
Are you lying to me?
Did you live in my house?
- Yes, asshole!
- Okay.
What about Mitch and Mo?
Still think they're members
of some blood cult?
That shit about your kid?
Oh, fuck you!
Everything I told you is true.
If you don't want to believe it,
that's on you.
But you stay the fuck away from me,
you fucking psychopath.
Fuck.
[pensive music playing]
[sighs]
[woman] Nora?
[laughs]
I didn't know you were coming.
You should've let me know.
Hi.
[woman] What's wrong?
Oh, nothing. I I was just
Well, it looks like
almost every piece is sold.
[both chuckle]
- Please sit.
- I can't believe it.
[woman] Let me get you some water.
[exhales, sniffles]
Thank you.
I probably shouldn't know this,
but, you know, people have nothing better
to do these days than to gossip,
and I heard
what's going on with you and Dean.
Yeah. Well, every marriage hits
a rough patch, right?
I thought we had ours,
but it's nothing like this one. [scoffs]
Well, can I just say then, this show
It's a real eye-opener
because it's telling me,
"Hey, if you and Dean can't work it out,
you can support your family."
How many artists can say that these days?
Seriously.
I want you back here
with another show next month.
How does that sound?
Well [chuckles]
I mean, yeah, of course.
Good. Good.
[phone vibrating]
[dog barks distantly]
[rustling]
Hello?
I saw you!
Dean! Is that you?
[exhales sharply]
- [gasps] Oh, God.
- [Pearl] Oh.
Someone's a little jumpy.
What is that saying? Um
"A mistress who is strung too tight
- has secrets that she keeps at night."
- [Nora scoffs]
I'm sorry. You just scared me.
I didn't know if you'd heard,
but Mitch and Mo,
your neighbors across the street
Turns out they weren't murdered
in the face with a shotgun.
I don't know whose funeral I went to.
Wait, but someone was shot, though.
I mean, we saw bodies being wheeled out,
and my husband heard gunshots, so
I don't know that we can necessarily
trust your husband at this point.
- I mean
- Okay.
What is it you need from me exactly?
I'm going to host
a luncheon tomorrow for Mo,
you know,
just to be a good neighbor and all.
A good old-fashioned Yankee potluck.
- Hmm.
- I really think you should be there.
Twelve o'clock.
I won't take no for an answer.
- Okay.
- [Pearl] Okay.
You wouldn't mind bringing a casserole?
Do you have a recipe?
Not off the top of my head, but
Nixon chicken, then.
Preheat the oven to 425,
brown some boneless chicken,
put it in a 8/12 casserole dish.
Add broccoli,
a can of cream of mushroom soup,
sprinkle cheese over the top,
cheese of your choice
Myself, I prefer a nice sharp cheddar.
And then bake for 35 minutes.
- Okay.
- [Pearl] Right?
Nixon chicken.
I'll see you tomorrow.
[Mo] Pearl, it's funny.
I don't think I've been
inside your house in, what, 20 years?
But it's
It's exactly as I remember it.
[Pearl] Mmm. My parents bought this house
right after they were married in the 1940s
and they never redecorated.
So, you know, I didn't either.
I just wanted to preserve it
just as it is.
[bell dinging]
[clears throat]
[sighs] I know
what this luncheon is really about.
When my son was in high school,
he got into the drugs
and, it can do this,
it triggered some mental illness.
The paranoia He hears voices.
We hadn't seen him in a while
and the last time we spoke
was to tell him about my cancer,
that it was treatable,
but who knows how long I've got. [laughs]
And that
Mitch and I were going to Florida.
But while we were on vacation,
he went to a homeless shelter in New Haven
and he found two elderly people
with the same body types
as his father and me.
And he brought them back to our house.
- And he shot and he killed them.
- [gunshots]
[gasps]
My God.
To collect the insurance money.
And then Well, I might as well say this.
There's a rumor you've
been getting some nasty letters, Nora.
[crying] And as soon as I heard,
I immediately thought,
"Oh, no, it's Christopher."
Mo, it's so funny that you would say this
because all this time,
I've been thinking
it was Jasper that wrote those letters.
- You're kidding me.
- [Pearl] No. I don't have any proof.
It's just a feeling that I have.
He has such an attachment
to that house of yours,
and a few weeks ago,
I remembered something
that happened, like, five years ago.
I got a letter in the mail.
It wasn't long.
Um
"An ode to a house," it said.
And then it was something like,
"Dear Miss Winslow, I love your house."
"I love looking at it.
I love how different it is."
"Your house is so special."
"I'm so glad you haven't changed it."
Do you still have it? Could I see it?
No, I threw it away.
But, I
For some reason, I always thought
it was Jasper who wrote it.
I mean, at the time we had been
talking about repainting the house,
and I thought maybe it was his way
of saying he didn't want that.
And the handwriting?
Does it look like his?
- It was typewritten.
- [Nora] Oh.
But he loves going to the library
and they have typewriters there.
He says he didn't do it.
[spluttering] But it's stuck with me.
[thudding]
[Nora] Oh
Is Is Jasper here?
No. No, he's at his craft class
at the community center.
Oh.
[thudding continues]
Is someone else here?
Oh, I hope it's a gentleman caller.
[laughter]
Just because a woman's over 50
doesn't mean she doesn't have needs.
[laughing] Isn't that right, Pearly?
Yes, Mo, that's right. [laughing]
- [beeping]
- [alarm armed]
[birds screeching]
[Ellie] Mom?
[sighs in relief]
- Sorry, you
- Can I talk to you?
Yeah, of course.
What is it, sweetie?
I know I screwed up with Dad.
I
I realize that, like,
whenever somebody makes me mad,
there's just nothing
I won't say to hurt them.
Nothing I won't do.
Even if I know I'll regret it later.
It's okay, sweetie.
We'll get through this.
[Nora sighs]
Ode to a house.
Our neighbor, Pearl,
she got a letter years ago
and that was the title, "Ode to a House."
It was a love letter, really,
but to their house.
And she thought her brother wrote it.
And Maureen,
she thinks
her son's writing the letters to us.
But you think it's Dad.
No, I
I don't believe it's him.
[horns honking]
[siren wailing]
Just hear me out.
[sighs]
Okay, you said you didn't sleep
with that girl in your bedroom
- and I didn't believe you, right?
- Right.
Well, I was curious as to see who she was.
So I went through the footage
to find out if I can find
the license plate on her car,
because what you said didn't make sense.
But get this.
Not only does she not show up
to your house in a car,
she didn't show up at all.
- I mean, I've gone through
- [keyboard clacking]
every second of footage from every angle,
all the way back to the day
I put those cameras in, okay?
And she didn't show up
in any of the footage.
Only place she shows up is your bedroom.
Wait. What do you mean?
Dude, I don't know how
she got inside your house.
What's going on?
Hey, Dad.
[car door closes]
Can we talk?
Hey.
[Nora] So, what are we saying?
The girl in the cherry dress is a ghost?
[Dakota] No. I mean, you know,
that's a little far out,
but there's cameras covering
the entire exterior of your house, right?
And in our bedroom.
I took that one out.
- She watched me do it.
- He did.
Ellie. Homework.
Point is, there's no footage
of this girl ever going into your house.
None. I mean, she does not show up.
And you double-checked?
Mrs. Brannock,
I've gone through it over and over
because it's weird. Right?
Either this girl, like,
parachuted onto the roof
and came down the chimney
or she's just, like, always inside here.
Hiding.
Or there's some other way in
we don't know about.
[Nora] This is just so creepy.
[Dakota] Look,
when your husband first told me
that he didn't know who that girl was
and that it was a setup,
I didn't believe him.
Now I do.
For what it's worth.
- [laptop closes]
- Can you give us a minute?
Yeah, of course.
[door opens]
[door closes]
I'm going to ask you some questions
and if you lie to me,
I swear to God, it's over between us.
You understand me? It's over.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
Ask me anything you want.
Did you fuck that girl?
No.
I never saw that girl in my life.
I don't know how she got in the room.
I never woke up.
I don't know how,
but I swear to God I'm telling the truth.
[Nora sighs] Okay.
Are you writing those letters?
Answer me.
Just the last one. I'm sorry.
- I'm sorry, I panicked.
- Oh, God. Jesus.
I panicked. I regret it so much now,
but I didn't know what to do.
Was it 'cause of the loan?
Why in God's name couldn't you
tell me that you didn't make partner?
I didn't know how.
I didn't know how. I was in shock.
And you tricked me into signing away
our entire savings,
our fucking retirement!
[Dean] I know. I'm sorry.
- I know it looks bad.
- [Nora] Don't.
I'm sorry. I didn't know what to do. I
Babe, you gotta believe me.
I
I did not write those first two letters.
Okay.
[breathing heavily] Oh, God.
[Nora sighs]
Nora.
Please don't divorce me over this.
Please.
I'm not saying I'll divorce you.
I'm not saying I won't.
Get your coat.
- Where are we going?
- To see Detective Chamberland.
The DNA results from
the first two letters should be in by now.
I think he's sitting on them.
So I called him
and said if they're not in,
I will file a lawsuit
against the police department.
Whoa.
You know what, funny story [laughs]
It turns out the results had
come in a few days ago, a week tops,
and, my apologies,
but some numbskull put it in my inbox
underneath a couple of stupid catalogs
I was never going to look at,
so I didn't see it.
Look, Restoration Hardware,
pinball company, vintage arcade.
It was right under here. [laughs]
So, again, my apologies.
And you haven't opened that yet?
Nope. I was waiting
for you good people to arrive.
Here we go.
All right.
These are for you to keep.
And
Here we go.
Ah. [chuckles softly]
It's not a match with
anybody in our database, unfortunately.
Huh. What the DNA sample did not contain
was a Y chromosome,
so that means your Watcher is a woman.
[cutlery clinking]
So, you're back for good?
Like, you're not going to leave again?
[Dean] For now.
It's not that easy being married
to your Dad, you know.
I'm glad you're back, Dad.
[Nora] So, where's that leave us?
Who are our female suspects?
Uh Well, Pearl, Mo, Big Mo, and Pigtails.
But I'll say it again,
Andrew thought it was Mitch and Mo.
And now with the whole son murders thing,
it just got weirder, right?
Mo thinks it's her son
writing the letters.
- But that doesn't jive with the DNA.
- [Dean] No.
[Nora] And then Pearl thinks
it's Jasper writing the letters,
but then the DNA thing again.
Yeah, the DNA thing.
I think we should take a pause
on this whole DNA thing. I
I'm not sure that the DNA on the envelope
is the same as whoever wrote the letters.
- Why not?
- [Dean] I don't know. I just
Whoever's writing these letters
The lengths that they're going to
to fuck with us
Why wouldn't they
take the extra little step of,
I don't know, putting gloves on
to write the letter, right?
Letting somebody else lick the envelopes.
Their mother, sister, girlfriend, whoever.
Boom. Female DNA, right?
And now we're chasing our tail again.
- That's what I would do.
- Well, you'd know, wouldn't you?
Okay. Good, I deserved that.
Okay, so what's that mean?
Are you saying
the whole female DNA thing
is not going to help us?
[Dean] I don't think it does.
All that tells me is
that whoever is writing the letters
is either female or knows a female,
which narrows it down to like
the entire population of planet Earth.
[Nora laughing] What the
- [laughs] We're back to square one.
- [Dean] Hmm.
[Nora] Hmm. [sighs]
- [rain pattering]
- [thunder rumbling]
It's John Graff.
I saw him. I talked to him.
No, you talked to
someone you think was him.
Yeah, in this house.
The house that
The house he lived in,
and murdered his entire family in.
Then this girl just shows up in the house,
on video, wearing the same dress
that Graff's daughter was murdered in?
Wearing pigtails?
You think that's a coincidence?
No. I don't, but I don't think
that actually means it's John Graff.
They never caught him.
Cut his face out of every photo of him
because he didn't want to be recognized.
So, why would he turn up at the one place
where everyone does know
what he looks like?
It just seems stupid, right?
I mean, why would he do that?
Just to Just to harass us?
That doesn't make any sense.
And I'm sorry, but I just don't believe
that a 17-year-old girl
is the mastermind behind all this.
Call me crazy, call me sexist,
but she's not The Watcher.
Somebody hired her.
Occam's razor.
What's the simplest solution?
What's motivating someone
to write those letters?
I don't know.
You wrote one. What were you trying to do?
- Make you give up the house?
- [Nora] Exactly.
And whoever's doing this
really wants the house.
They've wanted it for a while
and they want it for themselves.
Hey, sexy. I just want to confirm lunch.
I have one business thing
left to do for the day
and then, uh, I'll see you there.
- [line ringing]
- [Nora] Hello?
- [Karen] Hey, honey.
- Hey.
I have big news.
You got an offer!
Oh, really? Good.
You're not going to
Well, first of all, um,
do we know who it is?
No, no, no. It's an LLC.
But it doesn't matter
because it's an all-cash offer.
Okay, what's the offer?
You ready?
$1.9 million, cash.
I think you should take it!
What? No! We paid 3.3 million.
We're not selling it for 1.9, Karen.
Oh, come on. What are you talking about?
You know,
it's probably because of the letters.
Some people think it's haunted
Whatever, but my theory is
I think it's probably a developer
that really likes the land.
He's going to tear down the house
and salt the Earth and then rebuild.
Karen, no one's buying this house
just to tear it down.
Nora, I seriously think
you should consider it.
You need to talk to Dean and
You know what?
Maybe we can counter at like two even?
But look, I think you should
factor in your emotional well-being.
I really do.
We won't do better than this.
Okay, uh, I'll think about it.
Okay. Call me back.
- [Dean] Hi.
- Hey.
[Dean] Who was that?
[exhales] It's nothing. Hey.
Hi. I was thinking
I might cook dinner tonight.
'Cause I'm really, really good at it.
- Yeah. Sure.
- Yeah?
Can I have the keys?
I have to stop by the Country Club.
Yeah.
Hi. I'd like to speak
to Kathy in membership.
I want to ask her
why our membership was revoked?
- Sure. Let me see if I can get her.
- [Nora] Great. Thanks.
[dialing]
[dramatic music playing]
I need you to get down here right now.
I don't know. Take an Uber.
Hey, buddy.
Make a right up here, please. Sorry.
Wait, so, he's the guy
she's been fucking this whole time?
[Nora] Yeah. It has to be.
It makes that John Graff shit make sense.
She had access to all that information
the police were trying to cover up.
Unbelievable.
And remember how he was like,
"We know you had to dig deep
to afford that house."
Yeah, that's how he knew.
[Dean] Okay, I'm flying in.
Can we get a second car, by the way?
[Chamberland] And I said, "Okay, thanks."
[Chamberland and Karen laughing]
[Nora] Hi. What the heck
are you guys doing here?
[Dean] I had no idea you two were an item.
[Karen] Hi. We're not.
No, we're just, uh We're just
having a little late lunch.
- [Nora] Oh.
- [Dean] Huh
We didn't even know
that you two knew each other.
Because you never mentioned it,
which is weird.
What the hell is going on?
You come in here, interrupting us.
It's you. You're The Watcher.
- Or maybe it's both of you. One of you.
- [Chamberland scoffs]
Nora, you can't
make a statement like that.
Whoever The Watcher is
wants us out of that house, right?
Who's been telling me to sell that house
since the day we moved in? You.
Because you said
you were having money problems.
Which is how he knew that, right?
That bullshit about, "you gotta dig deep"?
It's a safe assumption.
It's a $3 million house.
And she tried to convince me that
you were having an affair.
- Right there at that table.
- What?
Yeah. "A girl in pigtails."
Weird phrase to use
just a few weeks before
a girl in pigtails shows up
at our house in our bedroom,
dressed like the girl who got murdered.
Her name was Pat Graff.
- That name ring a bell to you, Detective?
- No.
No, really?
This is fucking insane.
Security!
This is outrageous. No, this is slander.
It is. And you know what?
I thought we were friends.
I could lose my license over this.
You wanted the house
but couldn't afford it,
so he helps you by harassing us,
so we'll be willing to sell it cheap.
And it almost worked.
You could afford it at $1.9, right?
You even got us to do some nice
little renovations so you could flip it.
Now, tell me Karen.
Who's behind that LLC? Is it you?
Or him? Or both of you?
And those weird catalogs.
What are you doing with a pinball catalog
sitting on your desk?
I know, because a pinball machine
would look banging in a man cave.
Okay. This is just [clears throat]
This is Detective Chamberland.
I request a squad car
at the Westfield Country Club.
You fucked up
and you know you fucked up, okay?
Hiring some guy
to pretend he's a building inspector
to pretend he murdered his entire family?
And you recommended Theodora Birch.
Is she in on it, too?
I'm sorry, are they joining you?
[Dean] You know what?
This is all coming crashing down on you.
Okay? All of it, bro.
Expect a lawsuit because you're done.
- You're done.
- [Chamberland] Yeah.
[clanging]
[Karen] I might just call my friend
over at Page Six
because I think it's high time
that the whole world knows
what's going on at your house!
[Nora] We can't live like this.
It's driving us crazy.
[Dean] I know, but, look,
it all lines up, right?
It's not like
we said anything that wasn't true.
They're trying to gaslight us
and make us seem crazy,
but it's 'cause we're onto something.
Yeah, but what? What can we do?
We can't prove any of it.
Well, not yet,
but once we talk to Theodora?
[sighs] If Chamberland's in on it,
she is too.
Right?
This just isn't healthy.
I don't even recognize us anymore.
Okay, first we need to pay off
that loan you got us into,
and then I say we sell the house.
We take the best offer that comes in
and we just get our lives back.
[sighs]
My show sold out.
We'll be okay.
Wait, what Your show sold out?
Yeah. It did.
[Ellie] So I think I just found something.
Remember how you told me
about "Ode to a House"?
- That letter our neighbors got?
- Yeah.
I looked it up on social media.
Look at the first thing that popped up.
- You've gotta be kidding me.
- [Ellie] It's a whole group.
They all went to Westfield High School.
They all had the same English teacher,
who, I guess, made them do this assignment
they all loved.
What was the assignment?
Well, they were supposed to find
a house that they all loved
and, I guess, spend time
studying it or something.
Then they write a letter to it.
A love letter.
Holy shit, Ellie.
Look, somebody posted theirs.
"Dear 89 Hollyhock Ridge.
You're an exquisite house."
"Weathered and strong,
you've stood where you are for 99 years."
"Do you think you'll still be
standing 99 years from now?"
So, wait, who's the teacher,
and when did they die?
Who said he's dead? He's in the group.
His name is Roger Kaplan.
I just looked him up.
He lives in Westfield, 71 Oak Street.
[spluttering] Yeah, I've seen that face.
What do you mean?
Right here at the open house.
[knock at door]
[man] Sorry to interrupt.
There's something downstairs
you guys are going to want to see.
Cold air.
That's coming from in here,
which didn't make any sense.
- And when we took down the drywall
- [Dean] Yeah?
I couldn't quite figure out
where it was coming from.
Solid brick, no leaks.
But then one of my guys found the problem.
[grunts]
Check it out.
[Nora] Oh, my God.
- [Dean spluttering] It's a tunnel.
- [Nora] Right.
[Nora] Is that to
another part of the property?
- [man] No idea. We just found it.
- [Dean] No.
[man] These are actually pretty common
in the Northeast, with houses this old.
They used them
to run booze during prohibition.
[Dean] Andrew said there were tunnels.
[Nora sighs]
Fuck it. I'm going in.
- [man] Uh
- [Nora] Hold on. I'm coming with you.
[man] You're gonna want a hard hat.
[Dean] Holy shit.
Holy shit.
[Nora] Honey, let's just go back.
I cannot believe this.
[Dean] You all right? Watch it.
[Nora] It smells down here.
Wait. Oh, God.
- Please let's get outta here.
- [Dean] You're fine!
[Nora] Oh, my God.
What is this place?
Hold on.
[Nora screams]
[Dean] Shit. Hello?
[yells] Who are you?
[breathing heavily] Oh, shit.
[yells] Who are you?
[closing theme music playing]
No.
[sighs wearily]
[phone dialing]
[Tammy] Tides Motor Inn. This is Tammy.
Hello? Anyone there?
[ends call]
[line ringing]
[Theodora] Hello.
Uh, yeah, this is Nora Brannock
and, um I need to see you right away.
[honking]
[siren blaring]
- [doorbell chiming]
- [Theodora] Nora, how are you?
Not great.
I suppose Dean's told you that
he's not staying at the house right now.
Yeah. The girl in the video
in the bedroom.
He told me
that he doesn't know who she is.
Says he didn't sleep with her.
Hmm. That's what he told me, too.
And do you believe him?
I mean, I did.
Just doesn't seem like him.
I have to say, I like Dean a great deal.
But that video
Your bedroom,
a 17-year-old girl in pigtails
It kind of speaks for itself.
What?
That word, "pigtails."
What about it?
It's just so specific,
and I just heard my friend Karen
say it at the club a few weeks ago
and now you too.
Before that
I don't think I heard it for 20 years.
But that's not
what you called me about, is it?
No.
So, I wanted to look at his phone records,
so I could see if maybe
there was a number I didn't recognize.
Hers. The girl.
There wasn't anything on his cell phone,
so I thought, "Shit,
maybe he called her from the house."
"From the landline."
But that's not what I found.
Do you remember when we told you
that I got a call at the motel
when I was there by myself with the kids?
- Hello?
- [heavy breathing]
It was about 1:00 a.m
Hello?
- I remember.
- [hangs up]
So I checked the phone log,
and there it is.
Right there.
1:04 a.m. to the motel from our landline.
Holy shit.
Miss Birch, I think my husband's
the one writing those letters.
I think he freaked out.
We couldn't afford the house,
so he wanted out, but he couldn't tell me.
So he thinks, "If I can just scare her,
just enough,
she'll want to sell the house."
I think it's Dean. He's The Watcher.
[knocking at door]
Hi! I'm Karen.
Karen Calhoun from Darren Dunn Realty.
Can we have a little chat?
I mean, the rumors are swirling
and, uh, I just want you to know that
I'm not going to ask
for any of the details, okay?
My husband and I
aren't ready to talk about it.
Do you understand?
Mm-hmm. Which is why I said that I'm not
going to ask for any of the details.
Yeah.
I mean, even if you wanted me
to know what actually did happen,
like, who were the bodies
You know, I would just say,
"Uh-uh. Please, I don't want to hear it."
You know? [chuckles]
We don't want to talk about it.
Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah, well, look here, uh
You know, I'm in real estate, right?
And I just want to say your house
your house is an absolute stunner
and you're directly across the street
from the real prize.
Nora and Dean's house is just spectacular,
and everybody wants that house.
Anyway, can I just take
a little moment here
and just say congratulations
for taking such good care
of this amazing little nest egg,
because I know that you both are
of a certain age and, you know
I know you have
that condo down in Florida.
How do you know that?
You're probably mulling over in your head,
like, "When are we going to flap
our little snowbird wings
and move down there for good?"
You don't know that.
Well, what I do know is
that your house is now
what we call a stigmatized property.
It's because of the murders.
It's just your house is probably going
to go for way less than asking.
As much as 50%.
So, what do you want?
I would like to sell your house for you.
We're not listing it.
Well, you don't have to. Just
You just sell it to me.
Do you know Darren Dunn
of Darren Dunn Realty?
That's my boss.
And, well, what we do is we work together,
we set up an LLC and then we buy houses,
and then we flip them.
And people are always really happy.
My family is going through
a very difficult time. You can see that.
Have you no empathy, no dignity?
[chuckling] I get what I want, you know?
[door slams]
[tense music playing]
You were smart to come to me, Nora.
I spoke to my contact at the bureau.
He knows a handwriting analyst.
A guy he trusts.
I showed this guy the third envelope,
and the photos of the first two,
and the samples you gave me,
of Dean's handwriting,
birthday cards, valentines.
Now, he warned me
that it's not the best sample.
We've got 30 letters,
eight numbers, a slash and a comma.
Not a lot to work with, right?
Now, he couldn't say whether all of these
letters were written by one person.
They're obviously similar,
but there's enough variance in a couple
of the pen strokes between envelopes.
See, these two lines here, for instance.
One is an up stroke
and the other is a downstroke,
so he can't tell whether it's one person
who has two ways of writing a slash
or whether there's
a second person copying the first.
But here's something that he did notice.
Third envelope.
See the K in "Brannock"?
See that loop?
He said, in his experience
[clears throat]
only about one in ten people do that.
Look here.
Your husband
usually doesn't write in all caps,
but he did write in all caps
on Valentine's Day five years ago.
The last line reads,
"I love you, Mrs. Brannock."
Look at that last K.
Now, I couldn't pin this guy down.
He kept going on
about how this wasn't a good sample.
But I asked him, just his opinion,
what the likelihood was
that the person who wrote that valentine
also wrote the words on that envelope.
What did he say?
He said he was 70% to 80% certain it was.
[sighs]
Why would he do this to his own family?
If this was his dream home.
He was excited about the kitchen,
the town It's not like I forced him.
He was just as enthusiastic as I was.
[Theodora] He may have wanted
to please you, Nora.
I think he still does and that's why
he can't come out and admit it.
I think he got in too deep.
He thought he could afford something,
then realized that he couldn't.
In fact, I know that's what happened.
What?
I went to the bank
where you got your loan.
I talked to the guy, off the record.
His friend, Steve,
he told me about the hoops
he had to jump through with his boss
to get you that house.
Dean cashed out just about
every investment to secure that loan.
Stocks, bonds, your IRA.
But you had to have known that, right?
Because you had to have signed off on it.
Well, I I guess I
There were a lot of things to sign
Okay. That's all Yeah, one more.
and I guess I didn't read
the fine print
What are these?
Uh, this is just some IRA stuff.
The Roth. Just sign there, initial there.
and let him take charge.
Yeah.
And
And I knew I knew all of our money
was going into the house. I
Literally all of your money, Nora.
Except your AMEX card
and a checking account
with about ten grand in it.
So, when you decided to renovate
the kitchen and the basement
on top of the mortgage,
the money really wasn't there.
So he goes back to his friend Steve.
But, Steve, he said, "There is no way
I can approve a second loan."
"But, you know, there are some folks
who could lend you some money,
as long as you pay them back."
That wasn't a refi, Nora.
That was a high-interest loan on $150,000.
What the fuck.
I know. It is a lot.
[Nora] Okay, hold on.
This is only a problem
until he makes partner, right?
Sweetie
Dean got passed over for partner.
- When?
- I don't know.
He told Steve a few weeks ago,
but Steve isn't exactly sure
when it happened.
So, suddenly, not only does Dean realize
he's bought a house that he can't afford,
he now has a high-interest loan
from some shady people
and there is no way
he's going to be able to pay them
anytime soon.
He needed a way out.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Nora, I am so sorry
that we had to find out this way.
[sighs]
But I have to
tell you something, sweetheart.
We now know who The Watcher is.
[car passing]
Hey, Andrew.
What's Where are you going?
Where the fuck are you going?
Hey! Hey, motherfucker!
[honking]
[both grunting]
- The fuck. Let me go!
- It's fine!
Everything's fine!
Why are you running away from me, bro?
Why are you chasing me?
- Because you lied to me.
- No, I didn't!
You lied to me. You're an actor.
- You didn't tell me you were an actor.
- You didn't ask!
Are you lying to me?
Did you live in my house?
- Yes, asshole!
- Okay.
What about Mitch and Mo?
Still think they're members
of some blood cult?
That shit about your kid?
Oh, fuck you!
Everything I told you is true.
If you don't want to believe it,
that's on you.
But you stay the fuck away from me,
you fucking psychopath.
Fuck.
[pensive music playing]
[sighs]
[woman] Nora?
[laughs]
I didn't know you were coming.
You should've let me know.
Hi.
[woman] What's wrong?
Oh, nothing. I I was just
Well, it looks like
almost every piece is sold.
[both chuckle]
- Please sit.
- I can't believe it.
[woman] Let me get you some water.
[exhales, sniffles]
Thank you.
I probably shouldn't know this,
but, you know, people have nothing better
to do these days than to gossip,
and I heard
what's going on with you and Dean.
Yeah. Well, every marriage hits
a rough patch, right?
I thought we had ours,
but it's nothing like this one. [scoffs]
Well, can I just say then, this show
It's a real eye-opener
because it's telling me,
"Hey, if you and Dean can't work it out,
you can support your family."
How many artists can say that these days?
Seriously.
I want you back here
with another show next month.
How does that sound?
Well [chuckles]
I mean, yeah, of course.
Good. Good.
[phone vibrating]
[dog barks distantly]
[rustling]
Hello?
I saw you!
Dean! Is that you?
[exhales sharply]
- [gasps] Oh, God.
- [Pearl] Oh.
Someone's a little jumpy.
What is that saying? Um
"A mistress who is strung too tight
- has secrets that she keeps at night."
- [Nora scoffs]
I'm sorry. You just scared me.
I didn't know if you'd heard,
but Mitch and Mo,
your neighbors across the street
Turns out they weren't murdered
in the face with a shotgun.
I don't know whose funeral I went to.
Wait, but someone was shot, though.
I mean, we saw bodies being wheeled out,
and my husband heard gunshots, so
I don't know that we can necessarily
trust your husband at this point.
- I mean
- Okay.
What is it you need from me exactly?
I'm going to host
a luncheon tomorrow for Mo,
you know,
just to be a good neighbor and all.
A good old-fashioned Yankee potluck.
- Hmm.
- I really think you should be there.
Twelve o'clock.
I won't take no for an answer.
- Okay.
- [Pearl] Okay.
You wouldn't mind bringing a casserole?
Do you have a recipe?
Not off the top of my head, but
Nixon chicken, then.
Preheat the oven to 425,
brown some boneless chicken,
put it in a 8/12 casserole dish.
Add broccoli,
a can of cream of mushroom soup,
sprinkle cheese over the top,
cheese of your choice
Myself, I prefer a nice sharp cheddar.
And then bake for 35 minutes.
- Okay.
- [Pearl] Right?
Nixon chicken.
I'll see you tomorrow.
[Mo] Pearl, it's funny.
I don't think I've been
inside your house in, what, 20 years?
But it's
It's exactly as I remember it.
[Pearl] Mmm. My parents bought this house
right after they were married in the 1940s
and they never redecorated.
So, you know, I didn't either.
I just wanted to preserve it
just as it is.
[bell dinging]
[clears throat]
[sighs] I know
what this luncheon is really about.
When my son was in high school,
he got into the drugs
and, it can do this,
it triggered some mental illness.
The paranoia He hears voices.
We hadn't seen him in a while
and the last time we spoke
was to tell him about my cancer,
that it was treatable,
but who knows how long I've got. [laughs]
And that
Mitch and I were going to Florida.
But while we were on vacation,
he went to a homeless shelter in New Haven
and he found two elderly people
with the same body types
as his father and me.
And he brought them back to our house.
- And he shot and he killed them.
- [gunshots]
[gasps]
My God.
To collect the insurance money.
And then Well, I might as well say this.
There's a rumor you've
been getting some nasty letters, Nora.
[crying] And as soon as I heard,
I immediately thought,
"Oh, no, it's Christopher."
Mo, it's so funny that you would say this
because all this time,
I've been thinking
it was Jasper that wrote those letters.
- You're kidding me.
- [Pearl] No. I don't have any proof.
It's just a feeling that I have.
He has such an attachment
to that house of yours,
and a few weeks ago,
I remembered something
that happened, like, five years ago.
I got a letter in the mail.
It wasn't long.
Um
"An ode to a house," it said.
And then it was something like,
"Dear Miss Winslow, I love your house."
"I love looking at it.
I love how different it is."
"Your house is so special."
"I'm so glad you haven't changed it."
Do you still have it? Could I see it?
No, I threw it away.
But, I
For some reason, I always thought
it was Jasper who wrote it.
I mean, at the time we had been
talking about repainting the house,
and I thought maybe it was his way
of saying he didn't want that.
And the handwriting?
Does it look like his?
- It was typewritten.
- [Nora] Oh.
But he loves going to the library
and they have typewriters there.
He says he didn't do it.
[spluttering] But it's stuck with me.
[thudding]
[Nora] Oh
Is Is Jasper here?
No. No, he's at his craft class
at the community center.
Oh.
[thudding continues]
Is someone else here?
Oh, I hope it's a gentleman caller.
[laughter]
Just because a woman's over 50
doesn't mean she doesn't have needs.
[laughing] Isn't that right, Pearly?
Yes, Mo, that's right. [laughing]
- [beeping]
- [alarm armed]
[birds screeching]
[Ellie] Mom?
[sighs in relief]
- Sorry, you
- Can I talk to you?
Yeah, of course.
What is it, sweetie?
I know I screwed up with Dad.
I
I realize that, like,
whenever somebody makes me mad,
there's just nothing
I won't say to hurt them.
Nothing I won't do.
Even if I know I'll regret it later.
It's okay, sweetie.
We'll get through this.
[Nora sighs]
Ode to a house.
Our neighbor, Pearl,
she got a letter years ago
and that was the title, "Ode to a House."
It was a love letter, really,
but to their house.
And she thought her brother wrote it.
And Maureen,
she thinks
her son's writing the letters to us.
But you think it's Dad.
No, I
I don't believe it's him.
[horns honking]
[siren wailing]
Just hear me out.
[sighs]
Okay, you said you didn't sleep
with that girl in your bedroom
- and I didn't believe you, right?
- Right.
Well, I was curious as to see who she was.
So I went through the footage
to find out if I can find
the license plate on her car,
because what you said didn't make sense.
But get this.
Not only does she not show up
to your house in a car,
she didn't show up at all.
- I mean, I've gone through
- [keyboard clacking]
every second of footage from every angle,
all the way back to the day
I put those cameras in, okay?
And she didn't show up
in any of the footage.
Only place she shows up is your bedroom.
Wait. What do you mean?
Dude, I don't know how
she got inside your house.
What's going on?
Hey, Dad.
[car door closes]
Can we talk?
Hey.
[Nora] So, what are we saying?
The girl in the cherry dress is a ghost?
[Dakota] No. I mean, you know,
that's a little far out,
but there's cameras covering
the entire exterior of your house, right?
And in our bedroom.
I took that one out.
- She watched me do it.
- He did.
Ellie. Homework.
Point is, there's no footage
of this girl ever going into your house.
None. I mean, she does not show up.
And you double-checked?
Mrs. Brannock,
I've gone through it over and over
because it's weird. Right?
Either this girl, like,
parachuted onto the roof
and came down the chimney
or she's just, like, always inside here.
Hiding.
Or there's some other way in
we don't know about.
[Nora] This is just so creepy.
[Dakota] Look,
when your husband first told me
that he didn't know who that girl was
and that it was a setup,
I didn't believe him.
Now I do.
For what it's worth.
- [laptop closes]
- Can you give us a minute?
Yeah, of course.
[door opens]
[door closes]
I'm going to ask you some questions
and if you lie to me,
I swear to God, it's over between us.
You understand me? It's over.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
Ask me anything you want.
Did you fuck that girl?
No.
I never saw that girl in my life.
I don't know how she got in the room.
I never woke up.
I don't know how,
but I swear to God I'm telling the truth.
[Nora sighs] Okay.
Are you writing those letters?
Answer me.
Just the last one. I'm sorry.
- I'm sorry, I panicked.
- Oh, God. Jesus.
I panicked. I regret it so much now,
but I didn't know what to do.
Was it 'cause of the loan?
Why in God's name couldn't you
tell me that you didn't make partner?
I didn't know how.
I didn't know how. I was in shock.
And you tricked me into signing away
our entire savings,
our fucking retirement!
[Dean] I know. I'm sorry.
- I know it looks bad.
- [Nora] Don't.
I'm sorry. I didn't know what to do. I
Babe, you gotta believe me.
I
I did not write those first two letters.
Okay.
[breathing heavily] Oh, God.
[Nora sighs]
Nora.
Please don't divorce me over this.
Please.
I'm not saying I'll divorce you.
I'm not saying I won't.
Get your coat.
- Where are we going?
- To see Detective Chamberland.
The DNA results from
the first two letters should be in by now.
I think he's sitting on them.
So I called him
and said if they're not in,
I will file a lawsuit
against the police department.
Whoa.
You know what, funny story [laughs]
It turns out the results had
come in a few days ago, a week tops,
and, my apologies,
but some numbskull put it in my inbox
underneath a couple of stupid catalogs
I was never going to look at,
so I didn't see it.
Look, Restoration Hardware,
pinball company, vintage arcade.
It was right under here. [laughs]
So, again, my apologies.
And you haven't opened that yet?
Nope. I was waiting
for you good people to arrive.
Here we go.
All right.
These are for you to keep.
And
Here we go.
Ah. [chuckles softly]
It's not a match with
anybody in our database, unfortunately.
Huh. What the DNA sample did not contain
was a Y chromosome,
so that means your Watcher is a woman.
[cutlery clinking]
So, you're back for good?
Like, you're not going to leave again?
[Dean] For now.
It's not that easy being married
to your Dad, you know.
I'm glad you're back, Dad.
[Nora] So, where's that leave us?
Who are our female suspects?
Uh Well, Pearl, Mo, Big Mo, and Pigtails.
But I'll say it again,
Andrew thought it was Mitch and Mo.
And now with the whole son murders thing,
it just got weirder, right?
Mo thinks it's her son
writing the letters.
- But that doesn't jive with the DNA.
- [Dean] No.
[Nora] And then Pearl thinks
it's Jasper writing the letters,
but then the DNA thing again.
Yeah, the DNA thing.
I think we should take a pause
on this whole DNA thing. I
I'm not sure that the DNA on the envelope
is the same as whoever wrote the letters.
- Why not?
- [Dean] I don't know. I just
Whoever's writing these letters
The lengths that they're going to
to fuck with us
Why wouldn't they
take the extra little step of,
I don't know, putting gloves on
to write the letter, right?
Letting somebody else lick the envelopes.
Their mother, sister, girlfriend, whoever.
Boom. Female DNA, right?
And now we're chasing our tail again.
- That's what I would do.
- Well, you'd know, wouldn't you?
Okay. Good, I deserved that.
Okay, so what's that mean?
Are you saying
the whole female DNA thing
is not going to help us?
[Dean] I don't think it does.
All that tells me is
that whoever is writing the letters
is either female or knows a female,
which narrows it down to like
the entire population of planet Earth.
[Nora laughing] What the
- [laughs] We're back to square one.
- [Dean] Hmm.
[Nora] Hmm. [sighs]
- [rain pattering]
- [thunder rumbling]
It's John Graff.
I saw him. I talked to him.
No, you talked to
someone you think was him.
Yeah, in this house.
The house that
The house he lived in,
and murdered his entire family in.
Then this girl just shows up in the house,
on video, wearing the same dress
that Graff's daughter was murdered in?
Wearing pigtails?
You think that's a coincidence?
No. I don't, but I don't think
that actually means it's John Graff.
They never caught him.
Cut his face out of every photo of him
because he didn't want to be recognized.
So, why would he turn up at the one place
where everyone does know
what he looks like?
It just seems stupid, right?
I mean, why would he do that?
Just to Just to harass us?
That doesn't make any sense.
And I'm sorry, but I just don't believe
that a 17-year-old girl
is the mastermind behind all this.
Call me crazy, call me sexist,
but she's not The Watcher.
Somebody hired her.
Occam's razor.
What's the simplest solution?
What's motivating someone
to write those letters?
I don't know.
You wrote one. What were you trying to do?
- Make you give up the house?
- [Nora] Exactly.
And whoever's doing this
really wants the house.
They've wanted it for a while
and they want it for themselves.
Hey, sexy. I just want to confirm lunch.
I have one business thing
left to do for the day
and then, uh, I'll see you there.
- [line ringing]
- [Nora] Hello?
- [Karen] Hey, honey.
- Hey.
I have big news.
You got an offer!
Oh, really? Good.
You're not going to
Well, first of all, um,
do we know who it is?
No, no, no. It's an LLC.
But it doesn't matter
because it's an all-cash offer.
Okay, what's the offer?
You ready?
$1.9 million, cash.
I think you should take it!
What? No! We paid 3.3 million.
We're not selling it for 1.9, Karen.
Oh, come on. What are you talking about?
You know,
it's probably because of the letters.
Some people think it's haunted
Whatever, but my theory is
I think it's probably a developer
that really likes the land.
He's going to tear down the house
and salt the Earth and then rebuild.
Karen, no one's buying this house
just to tear it down.
Nora, I seriously think
you should consider it.
You need to talk to Dean and
You know what?
Maybe we can counter at like two even?
But look, I think you should
factor in your emotional well-being.
I really do.
We won't do better than this.
Okay, uh, I'll think about it.
Okay. Call me back.
- [Dean] Hi.
- Hey.
[Dean] Who was that?
[exhales] It's nothing. Hey.
Hi. I was thinking
I might cook dinner tonight.
'Cause I'm really, really good at it.
- Yeah. Sure.
- Yeah?
Can I have the keys?
I have to stop by the Country Club.
Yeah.
Hi. I'd like to speak
to Kathy in membership.
I want to ask her
why our membership was revoked?
- Sure. Let me see if I can get her.
- [Nora] Great. Thanks.
[dialing]
[dramatic music playing]
I need you to get down here right now.
I don't know. Take an Uber.
Hey, buddy.
Make a right up here, please. Sorry.
Wait, so, he's the guy
she's been fucking this whole time?
[Nora] Yeah. It has to be.
It makes that John Graff shit make sense.
She had access to all that information
the police were trying to cover up.
Unbelievable.
And remember how he was like,
"We know you had to dig deep
to afford that house."
Yeah, that's how he knew.
[Dean] Okay, I'm flying in.
Can we get a second car, by the way?
[Chamberland] And I said, "Okay, thanks."
[Chamberland and Karen laughing]
[Nora] Hi. What the heck
are you guys doing here?
[Dean] I had no idea you two were an item.
[Karen] Hi. We're not.
No, we're just, uh We're just
having a little late lunch.
- [Nora] Oh.
- [Dean] Huh
We didn't even know
that you two knew each other.
Because you never mentioned it,
which is weird.
What the hell is going on?
You come in here, interrupting us.
It's you. You're The Watcher.
- Or maybe it's both of you. One of you.
- [Chamberland scoffs]
Nora, you can't
make a statement like that.
Whoever The Watcher is
wants us out of that house, right?
Who's been telling me to sell that house
since the day we moved in? You.
Because you said
you were having money problems.
Which is how he knew that, right?
That bullshit about, "you gotta dig deep"?
It's a safe assumption.
It's a $3 million house.
And she tried to convince me that
you were having an affair.
- Right there at that table.
- What?
Yeah. "A girl in pigtails."
Weird phrase to use
just a few weeks before
a girl in pigtails shows up
at our house in our bedroom,
dressed like the girl who got murdered.
Her name was Pat Graff.
- That name ring a bell to you, Detective?
- No.
No, really?
This is fucking insane.
Security!
This is outrageous. No, this is slander.
It is. And you know what?
I thought we were friends.
I could lose my license over this.
You wanted the house
but couldn't afford it,
so he helps you by harassing us,
so we'll be willing to sell it cheap.
And it almost worked.
You could afford it at $1.9, right?
You even got us to do some nice
little renovations so you could flip it.
Now, tell me Karen.
Who's behind that LLC? Is it you?
Or him? Or both of you?
And those weird catalogs.
What are you doing with a pinball catalog
sitting on your desk?
I know, because a pinball machine
would look banging in a man cave.
Okay. This is just [clears throat]
This is Detective Chamberland.
I request a squad car
at the Westfield Country Club.
You fucked up
and you know you fucked up, okay?
Hiring some guy
to pretend he's a building inspector
to pretend he murdered his entire family?
And you recommended Theodora Birch.
Is she in on it, too?
I'm sorry, are they joining you?
[Dean] You know what?
This is all coming crashing down on you.
Okay? All of it, bro.
Expect a lawsuit because you're done.
- You're done.
- [Chamberland] Yeah.
[clanging]
[Karen] I might just call my friend
over at Page Six
because I think it's high time
that the whole world knows
what's going on at your house!
[Nora] We can't live like this.
It's driving us crazy.
[Dean] I know, but, look,
it all lines up, right?
It's not like
we said anything that wasn't true.
They're trying to gaslight us
and make us seem crazy,
but it's 'cause we're onto something.
Yeah, but what? What can we do?
We can't prove any of it.
Well, not yet,
but once we talk to Theodora?
[sighs] If Chamberland's in on it,
she is too.
Right?
This just isn't healthy.
I don't even recognize us anymore.
Okay, first we need to pay off
that loan you got us into,
and then I say we sell the house.
We take the best offer that comes in
and we just get our lives back.
[sighs]
My show sold out.
We'll be okay.
Wait, what Your show sold out?
Yeah. It did.
[Ellie] So I think I just found something.
Remember how you told me
about "Ode to a House"?
- That letter our neighbors got?
- Yeah.
I looked it up on social media.
Look at the first thing that popped up.
- You've gotta be kidding me.
- [Ellie] It's a whole group.
They all went to Westfield High School.
They all had the same English teacher,
who, I guess, made them do this assignment
they all loved.
What was the assignment?
Well, they were supposed to find
a house that they all loved
and, I guess, spend time
studying it or something.
Then they write a letter to it.
A love letter.
Holy shit, Ellie.
Look, somebody posted theirs.
"Dear 89 Hollyhock Ridge.
You're an exquisite house."
"Weathered and strong,
you've stood where you are for 99 years."
"Do you think you'll still be
standing 99 years from now?"
So, wait, who's the teacher,
and when did they die?
Who said he's dead? He's in the group.
His name is Roger Kaplan.
I just looked him up.
He lives in Westfield, 71 Oak Street.
[spluttering] Yeah, I've seen that face.
What do you mean?
Right here at the open house.
[knock at door]
[man] Sorry to interrupt.
There's something downstairs
you guys are going to want to see.
Cold air.
That's coming from in here,
which didn't make any sense.
- And when we took down the drywall
- [Dean] Yeah?
I couldn't quite figure out
where it was coming from.
Solid brick, no leaks.
But then one of my guys found the problem.
[grunts]
Check it out.
[Nora] Oh, my God.
- [Dean spluttering] It's a tunnel.
- [Nora] Right.
[Nora] Is that to
another part of the property?
- [man] No idea. We just found it.
- [Dean] No.
[man] These are actually pretty common
in the Northeast, with houses this old.
They used them
to run booze during prohibition.
[Dean] Andrew said there were tunnels.
[Nora sighs]
Fuck it. I'm going in.
- [man] Uh
- [Nora] Hold on. I'm coming with you.
[man] You're gonna want a hard hat.
[Dean] Holy shit.
Holy shit.
[Nora] Honey, let's just go back.
I cannot believe this.
[Dean] You all right? Watch it.
[Nora] It smells down here.
Wait. Oh, God.
- Please let's get outta here.
- [Dean] You're fine!
[Nora] Oh, my God.
What is this place?
Hold on.
[Nora screams]
[Dean] Shit. Hello?
[yells] Who are you?
[breathing heavily] Oh, shit.
[yells] Who are you?
[closing theme music playing]