Unforgettable s01e11 Episode Script
Spirited Away
Hey, what are you doing?! Okay, I'm telling the ward nurse! I'm telling the ward nurse! Whoa, nice bail.
Totally nutted that.
I hit something.
Yeah, a pile of you suck.
What the hell? Must've schralped yourself good, dude.
No, it's it's not me.
We got to get out of here.
Is there anything creepier than an empty mental hospital? A full one.
How long has this place been closed? A dozen years at least.
There's some kind of investigation.
The psychiatrist running the place was an actual lunatic.
- Doctor - Dr.
Helen Mostow.
Ah, you're a fan of the creepy too, huh? No, her name's still on the directory out front.
Ah.
Rumor is, there's a mass grave buried underneath the basement, but Dr.
Helen disappeared before anybody could ask her about it.
Time of death? The MLI said around midnight.
Appropriate.
Clean edges on that wound.
So we're probably looking for a knife or at least a manufactured blade.
No broken bottles or torn metal.
I'll tell the boys in blue.
They found this stuffed in a room down the hall.
Vic's name is Peter Suderman.
According to his license he was 42 and a partner at Spirit Trekkers Inc.
- A ghost hunter? - Yeah, looks like it.
Let's find out if the Inc.
means there are other people in the office.
Stay-stay out of my room! - I'm really very - You're not supposed to be here! can be in my room.
Nurse said This is Gordon.
He lives here.
I think he's lived here since before they closed the place down.
And this is his room.
Oh.
Okay.
Let me, uh Hi, Gordon.
Hey, I'm Carrie.
It's okay, it's okay.
I'm one of the new nurses here.
Did you take your pills today, Gordon? - No.
- No? Well, I have an idea.
Why don't we go into your room just for a minute we'll settle you in, and you'll be all ready when the cart comes, right? Okay.
No one else, just me.
You know, I like your collections, Gordon.
It's okay if I keep that.
Of course.
I didn't have a chance to make the bed.
I didn't I have all these things going up.
But that's why I built this.
All this mail belongs to the staff.
They haven't picked it up in a long time.
And this is my mail.
I've been sorting it.
Before you came in, I got I heard it was pretty busy here last night.
They shouldn't let kids in a hospital! I I agree with you.
I agree with you, Gordon, I agree with you.
And I actually I have two people out there telling them that right now.
- No more kids in the hospital.
- Okay.
Did anything else happen here last night? It happened only Dr.
Helen.
And she was angry.
- I keep telling - Dr.
Helen.
She's here every night.
Walks up and down the halls with a black stick.
She blinds you with it, that's what she does.
Gordon, there was a man, and he was attacked here last night.
She's wicked fast.
She jabs you with the stick.
Sucks your brains right through your eyes.
It's okay.
She's not here right now, okay? Gordon all right, you wait right here for me.
Okay.
Hey.
He see something? Yeah, but in his condition, he's never going to think it's anyone but Helen Mostow.
I say we find the calmest EMT we can, get him over to Queens Hospital Center.
All right, well, I'll take care of him.
Hey, you guys need to take a look at this.
Whoever did this, wasn't interested in his equipment.
This is what you call a thermal imaging camera.
Standard tool of the ghost hunting trade, as anybody who watches the Discovery Channel would know.
Ghosts give off heat just like people.
Probably didn't know that, did you? What have you got for us, Scooby? Looks like our vic was in the middle of recording something.
Guy heat-sensed his own murder.
The camera essentially represents thermal energy by converting it to the color scale we know.
Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, whatever.
With the red spectrum generally calibrated to be consistent with the heat emitted by a human body.
Or in this case, a spectral entity or a spirit.
Tanya, can you turn that into a person? Not a recognizable person.
I would say a fairly distinct blob is what we could hope for.
Oh, but your dead guy did have a digital recorder in his pocket.
Voice activated.
He was really pushing the low end, so I did some pretty basic E.
Q.
work.
- And? - I have audio.
It's not synched to the visual, but Well, listen for yourselves.
Sounds like a sneeze.
Can you do any better? I thought you'd never ask.
Denny, is that you? Denny, is that you? Finding Denny would be your job.
But I will keep working on the footage and see what else I can get out of it.
Thanks, Tanya.
It's really good to be back, guys.
Did you have fun with the Feds? Totally.
Ah, the digital evidence lab they have down there is ill.
Well, we missed you.
You did? I mean, you did? Yeah, I mean, how are we supposed to tell a mega from a pixel without you, right? Guys Happy ghost hunting.
"You did?" Yeah, what? It's purely professional, guys.
Come on.
All right, so, who's Denny, huh? Is it a ghost of somebody who was killed in the hospital? Or a living person named Denny who may have killed Peter Suderman.
You don't actually believe in ghosts? You forget, my family's originally from New Orleans.
That place was crawling with ghosts.
- You ever see one? - You kidding? One time there was this guy got shot by someone breaking into his house, and now he's this ghost in his old apartment.
He's living there, trying to talk to his wife, but But let me guess there's just this one little boy who can see him.
So you know the story, too? I saw the movie, actually.
The Sixth Sense.
Nah, it was nothing like that.
I don't care what you say.
I think ghosts are real.
I see them all the time.
The - There's one right behind you right now.
- There actually is.
There is something back there.
Really? You really think I'm going to turn around now? - Is anyone else seeing this? - It's Aw, too bad, it's gone.
Mature very mature.
How long have you and Peter Suderman worked together? We went to PS 417 together in Bayside.
Lost touch over the years.
We reconnected when he was looking for financing for Spirit Trekkers.
Do you believe in ghosts, Arthur? I believe in people who believe in ghosts.
- And who'll pay you to look for them? - They're the best kind.
Hey, people pay to have their palms read, to walk on coals.
My cousin shelled out two grand for a pomegranate enema.
There's nothing illegal about it.
There was something illegal about selling diet pills made of sugar and baking soda.
That was ten years ago.
Look, when people pay for a fortune teller or for a ghost hunter, what they're really paying for is happiness.
Now Peter, bless him, he understood that.
All the tragedy in his life.
He lost his wife and son in a car accident, you know.
He understood how powerful that drive for happiness can be.
What was he doing out at the sanitarium? He heard all the stories about how haunted it was.
He just couldn't resist.
- Did he find anything out there? - Not that I know of.
Do you know someone named Denny? Yes.
Denny Moskin.
He's a kid from NYU who's helping Peter at the sanitarium.
We had to let him go.
Actually, he came to the office last week super teed-off, yelling at us that we owed him money.
We're going to need his contact information, and for all your recent clients.
Sure.
But nobody would kill Peter over money.
Okay, me, I'm a hustler, basically but Peter was different.
It was never about money for him, not for a second.
He just wanted to help people.
Tenants were hearing noises at night, right? And they threatened to withhold rent.
So I called Spirit Trekkers.
And Suderman shows up with all this equipment.
Kids in the neighborhood were taunting our children, said the house we just moved into was haunted.
Got so Trent and Jane couldn't sleep in their own bedrooms.
It's the only haunted B&B in the Tri-State area.
We thought it would be an asset to get certification.
Kind of make it official.
What did Mr.
Suderman say? He went through the house very thoroughly, couldn't find a thing.
And he talked to our kids, too.
No more sleeping problems.
A lot cheaper than $175 an hour I spent on that child psychiatrist.
Suderman wouldn't certify us.
And so, what did you do? Went to another guy.
I gave him 80 bucks.
He signed off right away.
You must have been upset.
At first, but Suderman found the problem: faulty radiator caps.
You believe it? Anyway, a few changes later, no more chains clanging at midnight.
So far, it's not looking like one of his former clients.
And you talked to everybody? All except a doctor and his wife down in Richmond Hill.
Wife's been sick.
And then a couple of other clients are out of town.
Let's see if they were out of town during the murder.
How about the partner, Arthur Greene? His alibi checks out.
He had a meeting with his lawyers, then dinner until late.
So I got Gordon Kemp admitted up at QHC.
He's still going on about Dr.
Helen, but he's not being violent, he's got no history of violence.
I don't think this is the guy.
Okay.
And Suderman's cell phone and financials? Nothing much.
I got his credit card charges for the last two months.
Couple months? I spend more than this in two days.
But I pay my bill in full every month.
"Walker-Dunlap.
" What is that? There's a bunch of charges to them.
It's a forensics lab out in Jersey.
Suderman used 'em from time to time.
Did anything else happen here last night? It happened only Dr.
Helen.
Dr.
Helen? Gordon had an envelope addressed to Walker-Dunlap in his room.
Maybe he got it off of Suderman's body or out of his backpack.
Yep.
Al, we gotta get a look at that envelope.
I'll get Roe to pick it up.
All right, that was NYU.
They think they know where Denny Moskin might be.
I'll grab Nina and head down there.
Great.
Why don't you talk to that doctor and his wife? Sure.
Dr.
Barlow, I'm Lieutenant Burns.
- This is Detective Wells.
- Carrie.
We called? Right.
I already told the other detective.
My wife's not feeling well.
Well, that's why we came to you.
We thought we'd save you the trouble.
We just want to ask you a few questions about Peter Suderman.
Sure.
Come in.
Thanks.
It's terrible.
Suderman was a good man.
He was conducting an investigation for you? We had an issue.
We thought we had an issue.
But it's resolved now.
What kind of an issue, exactly? This is an old house.
Lots of creaks and groans, wind through the cracks.
Things that could be mistaken for something else.
Like ghosts? My wife thought she heard something coming from the basement.
Some kind of voice.
A voice? A woman's voice.
So we called Mr.
Suderman.
And he came, found nothing, we thanked him, and that was the end of it.
Was that the end of it for you, Janine? Of-of course.
How are you feeling, by the way? Better I hope.
Sorry? Anything else we can do for you, Detectives? You know, I was wondering what kind of medicine you practice.
Thoracic surgery, but I developed a slight tremor.
Nothing big.
I just, I had to close my practice about a year ago.
- Early retirement.
- Right.
We're planning a long overdue trip to Paris.
That's nice.
I was asking because, well, I was hoping you weren't a psychiatrist.
I don't want you to laugh when I ask if you mind if I look at the basement.
Why the basement? Well, you heard something in there, right? You don't believe me.
Oh, no, it's not that at all.
I just, I thought I'd take a look around.
The basement's not Janine's favorite place, but I'm happy to give you a tour.
That's an interesting place for a nap.
Oh, that.
Ever since Janine been talking ghosts, our nieces and nephews have come down here, try to sleep down here.
No one's made it through the night.
Yeah, not sure I would either.
Detective, I feel like there's something I should tell you.
For years my wife and I have been trying to have children.
Our last attempt ended in a miscarriage.
We learned it was a little girl.
I'm sorry.
I think Janine never really fully recovered.
I mean, this fixation, of course, has something to do with the baby.
She thinks it was her fault.
That's why I called Suderman.
Thought maybe it would help.
And did it? I think so, yes.
Dr.
Barlow, do you think it's possible that Suderman was having something related to your case tested at a forensics lab? Sorry uh, no.
Maybe we should go back upstairs.
I'm a little worried about Janine.
Police! Cut! Oh What is happening? Since when are there police? Dennis Moskin? Is it about the permits? Abby, did you file the permits? Okay, everybody, let's take a break.
I'm not budgeted for a break.
Are you budgeted for bail money?! Take ten.
This look familiar? Sure, that's Peter.
He's dead.
- For real? - Very real.
He was murdered last night in the Queens Park Sanitarium.
We have audio that makes it sound like you were there and a witness who says he saw the two of you getting into it the other day.
I didn't kill him.
Then why were you at the sanitarium? It was a joke.
I love a joke.
How does it go? I went, I went to the sanitarium 'cause I was pissed at Peter.
Because he fired you, right? Now, why did he do that? I don't know.
Mr.
Moskin, you are five seconds away from a long and expensive break in production.
Okay, I borrowed some equipment.
So you stole.
I was gonna use it in my film, and give it back.
But he got angry and fired me.
So I took some stuff out to the neoprene suit, some fiberglass to scatter the heat signature; created some kick-ass ghost effects.
When he realized it was me, he dropped the camera and came after me.
So, okay this this is you.
Yeah, that, that's actually pretty good, huh? Ah, wait a minute.
Go back a little bit.
There.
That, that's not me.
It's moving.
What is that? So, this is you.
but this is not you.
All right, so who else was there that night? Just the kooky homeless guy who lives there.
You realize how lame this story's sounding, Denny? I swear.
I just scared him.
He was alive when I left.
Look, I shot my own film of the whole thing.
You can look at it.
Now, now that is even lamer.
I must inform you gentlemen, whatever was or is in this envelope may obviously have been contaminated.
There's no chain of custody here, Tanya.
Just need to know what Suderman wanted tested.
Criminologist Tanya Sitkowksy.
I'm opening evidence bag marked 17 alpha 591 containing one padded manila envelope.
Approximately 20.
3 centimeters by 25.
4 centimeters.
Gives new meaning to the word "approximately.
" Contents include removing one synthetic bag What's inside the bag, Tanya? That's what we care about.
You can't rush science, Lieutenant.
I believe Archimedes said that.
I believe you say it every time we come down here.
It's a bone.
What kind of bone? A human bone if I'm not mistaken.
Give me a moment.
Or two.
Yes, a human finger would be more precise.
I would say the fifth distal phalanx from the right extremity.
Pinky finger.
It's hard to determine much more without complete skeletal and subdural remains.
As you might say, I need the dead guy.
Suderman found the pinky.
Where's the body? And who's the body? My guess, we find out, we find who killed him.
"A brief assessment of the dorsal surface indicates "non-granularity, lack of macroporosity, lack of striations," yada, yada.
Geez, Tanya.
"Almost certain identification of the subject" "as female, aged approximately Maybe those rumors about a mass grave under the sanitarium are true.
Except, as a minor, this girl never would have been admitted to Queens Park.
So let's run the DNA info through the index system, see if it ties to any open homicides.
Suderman could have picked up that bone anywhere.
Oh, and by the way, our film boy, Denny, it seems like he's in the clear.
I watched that stuff he shot the night of the murder.
And Suderman was scared, but they both end up laughing about the thing.
Wait a second.
This bone has trace amounts of zinc phosphide.
Zinc phosphide.
Of course! - Really, Roe? - All right, go ahead.
Zinc phosphide is one of the key ingredients found in rat poison.
The Barlows had rat traps all over their basement.
So you think Suderman found the bone in their basement? I think Janine heard a woman's voice coming from the basement.
Maybe he found the bone there.
Well, we're not getting a warrant based on a few rat traps and a ghost.
I'll talk to Arthur Green, his partner at Spirit Trekkers, and see if he knew anything.
And I'm gonna head to the Barlows', see what I can find out.
We should actually confirm that Suderman found the bone in their house before we do anything.
You're absolutely right.
You should try to confirm that.
Carrie I am not going to try to get into the house without a warrant.
I'm not! You heard that.
Dr.
Barlow.
Carrie Wells.
I remember.
Yeah, is Janine around? I wanted to ask you guys a few more questions regarding the Peter Suderman investigation.
Detective, my wife, she heard voices A voice, actually.
The man came to the house.
He didn't find anything.
I'm sorry that he died.
But I don't see how I can help you.
You know, we have a piece of evidence recovered from your basement that could be connected to Peter Suderman's murder.
What piece of evidence? I'd really like to talk to your wife.
She's inside, with a headache.
Asleep.
She gets terrible headaches.
Migraines.
A piece of potentially crucial evidence was found inside your basement.
Me? I'd want to get to the bottom of that as soon as possible.
I'm not going to dignify that with a response.
I thought we had an understanding.
I'm gonna go into my house now.
I suggest you get off my property.
Hey.
Where the hell are you? Outside the Barlow house.
Good.
How we doing on that warrant? DA says we're close.
Close? You know, Al? I'm think I'm hearing an argument going on inside.
No, you're not.
Oh yeah.
It's getting pretty heated in there.
Carrie, don't even think about it Oh, see, now I hear glass breaking.
No, you don't! She sounds like she might be in trouble, I think we got exigent circumstances here Carrie, you can't go in there.
Al? Al? I think I lost you No, you didn't lose me! Listen to me! Damn reception.
Please wake up.
Please, wake up! Come on.
Oh, thank God, you're okay.
Oh where am I? My head ow.
What happened? Sam.
He was afraid you were gonna tell someone.
That I was gonna tell someone.
Tell them what? About her.
Oh, you gotta untie me.
Uh where does it where's my gun? He took it.
After he knocked you out.
He was furious.
Then he made me come down here.
Oh, God He knows I can hear her crying.
That's why he locks me down here.
To punish me.
He's done this before? For days, sometimes.
You gotta help me up.
Ah, God You shouldn't have come back here.
We're gonna get out of here.
All right.
Do you hear her? No.
It's so dark where she is.
She's afraid of the dark.
She's crying Janine, listen to me.
Look at me.
No one's going to hurt you.
Okay? We are getting out of here.
We're gonna die.
He's going to kill us both.
The M.
E.
got a DNA match on that bone.
A runaway from upstate Lily Mueller.
She was 14 when she left.
Her mother's on her way.
That's a shame.
Anybody heard from Carrie? I tried her cell a couple of times, went straight to voicemail.
Wanted to tell her that Janine Barlow's medical records don't say anything about a miscarriage.
Roe, get over to the Barlow house, make sure Carrie's not in it.
I can't unlock this door.
I'm sorry, Carrie.
I deserve to be here, not you.
That's ridiculous.
I knew what he did.
In my heart I always knew.
And I never said a word.
The girl.
Who is she? Her name was Lily.
I met her in the park.
She was living there, she ran away from home.
I know I should have called the police, but we started talking, and she told me about her life.
I felt sorry for her.
So I asked her to come here and help around the house.
Have a roof over her head.
She was so sweet.
She made this old, dead house feel alive.
I always wanted a little girl of my own.
But Sam wanted her too.
And when I confronted him, he was furious.
He denied it.
But I knew.
The next day, she was gone.
He told me he'd fired her.
But he didn't.
I found a pair of sneakers, in the garbage behind the house.
There was blood on them.
I think it was his way of telling me without telling me.
I know it sounds crazy.
But ever since then, I've been hearing her cries.
But you don't hear them.
- Janine, Janine, Janine, Janine - No one does.
I'm gonna get us out of here.
Okay, we're going to get out of here, there's always a way.
I just wish I had some light.
Oh.
Uh Here.
I keep this hidden.
Because sometimes he cuts out the light.
This is great.
Okay.
This'll help.
Let's see See? He's trying to kill us! Janine, Janine, Janine, look at me.
I want you to stay focused on me, all right? I want you to think really hard.
Is there any way out of this basement? There's got to be some way out.
Yes.
- Okay? - Yes, there is.
- Where? - There.
There.
It's a crawl space that runs under the entire house.
But I've, I've been afraid to use it.
Sorry.
Hang on.
Take this, hold it.
All right.
Okay Okay.
Come on.
Come on Oh! That's not gonna work.
No.
No.
No, no, no.
No.
Listen to me, Janine.
I'll find another way.
There is no other way.
Hang on a second.
These old houses were built for coal, right? The question is how do you get the coal to the basement? Coal chute.
Boom.
Hold this.
All right.
Come on! Lily! Janine, come on.
Go.
Go, now, go! Isn't that your husband's car? - Yes! - Why's his car still here? That doesn't make any - He's still inside.
- No.
It's not possible.
I want you to stay here, - and call 911.
- Where are you going? No! Carrie, don't.
- I'm going to get him.
Call 911! - Carrie! Carrie! Please! Hey.
Come on, wake up.
Carrie? I'm over here.
Come on.
Here.
So Sam Barlow's still in intensive care.
When they think he's up to it, they're going to transfer him to the prison ward at Bellevue.
Okay, so husband kills a girl.
Suderman found part of the body.
Guy sets fire to take out his wife, destroy the evidence.
What's he doing still in the house? Had to get liquored up to do it.
Never got out.
The findings on the doctor's bag in Sam Barlow's trunk.
Got a bloody scalpel.
They're checking for prints.
Gonna match the blood to Suderman's, but that's a no-brainer.
And the mud on his tires looks like a match to the mud outside the sanitarium.
Yeah, but why's the guy hire a ghost hunter to look around right where he's buried the girl? Ah classic arrogance of the nonbeliever.
See, Barlow's a doctor, a man of science.
He thinks Suderman's a quack, gonna let him come in, sniff around a little, calm the wife down, send him on his way.
Then the bone shows up, and it's like Katy bar the door.
Okay, but even you gotta admit there's no ghost in this story.
- Yeah? - Yeah.
Then what's the wife hearing down in the basement, huh? You tell me.
Did you just say, "Katy bar the door"? Yeah.
It's like an expression, you know.
Like, uh, "Get out my face.
" Like, "Talk to the fist 'cause the hand is pissed.
" What the hell are you doing here? I'm okay.
Turns out you don't use the back of your head for very much.
Mike tells me you went back in to save Barlow's life.
No, I went back in to get my badge and my gun.
Barlow just happened to be there.
At least he won't be around Janine anymore, right? We got her in touch with a friend from nursing school.
Put them both up in a hotel for now.
Good.
Look, I know you're gonna do what you're gonna do, but going back into a burning house? Sometimes it feels like you want to get hurt.
Al, he was in the house, just lying there.
What was I supposed to do? You could've died.
But I didn't.
I didn't know you cared so much.
Hate to lose a good detective.
Really? Yup.
Hey.
Don't know if you still need it, but I did more work on the thermal footage that other shape in the background that Mike showed me.
So I called a friend at NASA who gave me this algorithm Tanya Sorry.
Uh I was able enhance it.
Turns out it's a flashlight.
Right, but it's thermal.
Wouldn't it show up super bright? Yeah, if it was on.
This one was off.
So, what you're seeing is the vestigial heat pattern.
- What are the spots? - Multiple bulbs.
LED, halogen, some of those fancy new ones.
Can you tell what kind of flashlight this is? I'm ahead of you.
Based on bulb placement and light source, there are only a few on the market that could produce this heat pattern, but I'd say based on size and design of the head chassis, there's really only one.
The Powerstream 4800.
I keep this hidden 'cause sometimes he cuts out the lights.
She walks up and down the hall with a black stick.
She blinds you with it.
That's what she does.
Janine had one of these flashlights in her basement.
- Can I borrow this? - Sure.
Why the basement? You don't believe me.
Please wake up.
Thank God you're okay.
- I'm going inside.
- Don't.
Carrie, don't.
Please don't.
Hey, it's Carrie.
When we processed Dr.
Barlow, did you check his blood alcohol level? Zero.
Just like I thought.
- Thank you.
- All right, listen to this.
Janine Barlow was a surgical nurse.
She was dismissed from her last position because of a violent incident.
It wasn't him.
She's the one who knocked me out.
She's the one who set the fire.
She was trying to kill him.
And herself.
She locked herself in the basement.
Without you, she would've died down there.
There's a crawl space that runs under the entire house.
No.
No-no-no.
No No.
She thought she had a way out, but the fire spread too quickly.
She was surprised.
Call Nina.
Tell her to get over to the hotel where she put Janine.
Wait.
She won't be there.
She tried to kill him once.
She's gonna go to the hospital and finish the job.
All right, we'll call security on the way.
Excuse me.
Where is Sam Barlow? I think Louis took him downstairs for inhalation therapy.
Are there any other elevators in this area? There's one around the corner and another one down the hall.
I got this one.
All right.
- Louis? - Yeah.
Where's Sam Barlow? The other nurse told me I was supposed to come back, and she'd take him downstairs.
Nurse.
This way? Yeah.
Janine! Janine Janine.
Janine, listen to me.
Put the knife down.
Put it down.
He was gonna tell you everything.
No.
He was trying to protect you.
No! Janine, hey.
Okay.
Put the knife down.
I loved him.
I loved him.
He just wanted her.
He lied for you for years.
For years.
Think about that.
That's gotta mean something, right? I I I just want to go home.
Put the knife down, and we can all go home together.
All right? Just put the knife down.
That's all you have to do, and we can go.
I can't.
Yes, you can.
She's waiting for me.
No, Janine.
No.
She's waiting for him! Janine.
You okay? Yeah.
I just want to get out of here.
How about him? He's okay.
Get a little help over here! I'm all right.
Just a You're gonna need stitches.
Did I mention I hate needles? Ah, quit being a baby, will you? I'm not getting in that thing.
I got this.
Wheelchair? I thought I'd find you up here.
So Barlow's awake and talking.
He confesses to hiding the body of Lily Mueller but not to killing her.
That was Janine.
Jealousy.
According to Barlow, there was no reason.
She made it all up.
What about Suderman? When Barlow realized she'd killed him, he didn't have the heart to cover for her again.
He told her as much, that he was gonna come clean to us.
So he had to die.
You know, she told me she loved him.
- Strange way of showing it.
- Yeah.
Burning him alive.
Yeah, I'm more of a red roses kind of girl.
Weird thing with Janine, she didn't know the body was down there, but she was hearing things.
Let me ask you.
After all these years since your sister died, you ever feel, I don't know, you ever get a feeling? Are you asking me if I believe in ghosts? Yeah, I guess I am.
I want to believe that there's more after we die, you know.
I want to believe that Rachel is still here in some way.
And sometimes I can feel her so close, like she's all around me.
I can feel her, like I can just reach out an-and touch her, almost.
And I know she's there.
I do.
I just I wish What? I wish she'd say hello.
Hmm.
Totally nutted that.
I hit something.
Yeah, a pile of you suck.
What the hell? Must've schralped yourself good, dude.
No, it's it's not me.
We got to get out of here.
Is there anything creepier than an empty mental hospital? A full one.
How long has this place been closed? A dozen years at least.
There's some kind of investigation.
The psychiatrist running the place was an actual lunatic.
- Doctor - Dr.
Helen Mostow.
Ah, you're a fan of the creepy too, huh? No, her name's still on the directory out front.
Ah.
Rumor is, there's a mass grave buried underneath the basement, but Dr.
Helen disappeared before anybody could ask her about it.
Time of death? The MLI said around midnight.
Appropriate.
Clean edges on that wound.
So we're probably looking for a knife or at least a manufactured blade.
No broken bottles or torn metal.
I'll tell the boys in blue.
They found this stuffed in a room down the hall.
Vic's name is Peter Suderman.
According to his license he was 42 and a partner at Spirit Trekkers Inc.
- A ghost hunter? - Yeah, looks like it.
Let's find out if the Inc.
means there are other people in the office.
Stay-stay out of my room! - I'm really very - You're not supposed to be here! can be in my room.
Nurse said This is Gordon.
He lives here.
I think he's lived here since before they closed the place down.
And this is his room.
Oh.
Okay.
Let me, uh Hi, Gordon.
Hey, I'm Carrie.
It's okay, it's okay.
I'm one of the new nurses here.
Did you take your pills today, Gordon? - No.
- No? Well, I have an idea.
Why don't we go into your room just for a minute we'll settle you in, and you'll be all ready when the cart comes, right? Okay.
No one else, just me.
You know, I like your collections, Gordon.
It's okay if I keep that.
Of course.
I didn't have a chance to make the bed.
I didn't I have all these things going up.
But that's why I built this.
All this mail belongs to the staff.
They haven't picked it up in a long time.
And this is my mail.
I've been sorting it.
Before you came in, I got I heard it was pretty busy here last night.
They shouldn't let kids in a hospital! I I agree with you.
I agree with you, Gordon, I agree with you.
And I actually I have two people out there telling them that right now.
- No more kids in the hospital.
- Okay.
Did anything else happen here last night? It happened only Dr.
Helen.
And she was angry.
- I keep telling - Dr.
Helen.
She's here every night.
Walks up and down the halls with a black stick.
She blinds you with it, that's what she does.
Gordon, there was a man, and he was attacked here last night.
She's wicked fast.
She jabs you with the stick.
Sucks your brains right through your eyes.
It's okay.
She's not here right now, okay? Gordon all right, you wait right here for me.
Okay.
Hey.
He see something? Yeah, but in his condition, he's never going to think it's anyone but Helen Mostow.
I say we find the calmest EMT we can, get him over to Queens Hospital Center.
All right, well, I'll take care of him.
Hey, you guys need to take a look at this.
Whoever did this, wasn't interested in his equipment.
This is what you call a thermal imaging camera.
Standard tool of the ghost hunting trade, as anybody who watches the Discovery Channel would know.
Ghosts give off heat just like people.
Probably didn't know that, did you? What have you got for us, Scooby? Looks like our vic was in the middle of recording something.
Guy heat-sensed his own murder.
The camera essentially represents thermal energy by converting it to the color scale we know.
Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, whatever.
With the red spectrum generally calibrated to be consistent with the heat emitted by a human body.
Or in this case, a spectral entity or a spirit.
Tanya, can you turn that into a person? Not a recognizable person.
I would say a fairly distinct blob is what we could hope for.
Oh, but your dead guy did have a digital recorder in his pocket.
Voice activated.
He was really pushing the low end, so I did some pretty basic E.
Q.
work.
- And? - I have audio.
It's not synched to the visual, but Well, listen for yourselves.
Sounds like a sneeze.
Can you do any better? I thought you'd never ask.
Denny, is that you? Denny, is that you? Finding Denny would be your job.
But I will keep working on the footage and see what else I can get out of it.
Thanks, Tanya.
It's really good to be back, guys.
Did you have fun with the Feds? Totally.
Ah, the digital evidence lab they have down there is ill.
Well, we missed you.
You did? I mean, you did? Yeah, I mean, how are we supposed to tell a mega from a pixel without you, right? Guys Happy ghost hunting.
"You did?" Yeah, what? It's purely professional, guys.
Come on.
All right, so, who's Denny, huh? Is it a ghost of somebody who was killed in the hospital? Or a living person named Denny who may have killed Peter Suderman.
You don't actually believe in ghosts? You forget, my family's originally from New Orleans.
That place was crawling with ghosts.
- You ever see one? - You kidding? One time there was this guy got shot by someone breaking into his house, and now he's this ghost in his old apartment.
He's living there, trying to talk to his wife, but But let me guess there's just this one little boy who can see him.
So you know the story, too? I saw the movie, actually.
The Sixth Sense.
Nah, it was nothing like that.
I don't care what you say.
I think ghosts are real.
I see them all the time.
The - There's one right behind you right now.
- There actually is.
There is something back there.
Really? You really think I'm going to turn around now? - Is anyone else seeing this? - It's Aw, too bad, it's gone.
Mature very mature.
How long have you and Peter Suderman worked together? We went to PS 417 together in Bayside.
Lost touch over the years.
We reconnected when he was looking for financing for Spirit Trekkers.
Do you believe in ghosts, Arthur? I believe in people who believe in ghosts.
- And who'll pay you to look for them? - They're the best kind.
Hey, people pay to have their palms read, to walk on coals.
My cousin shelled out two grand for a pomegranate enema.
There's nothing illegal about it.
There was something illegal about selling diet pills made of sugar and baking soda.
That was ten years ago.
Look, when people pay for a fortune teller or for a ghost hunter, what they're really paying for is happiness.
Now Peter, bless him, he understood that.
All the tragedy in his life.
He lost his wife and son in a car accident, you know.
He understood how powerful that drive for happiness can be.
What was he doing out at the sanitarium? He heard all the stories about how haunted it was.
He just couldn't resist.
- Did he find anything out there? - Not that I know of.
Do you know someone named Denny? Yes.
Denny Moskin.
He's a kid from NYU who's helping Peter at the sanitarium.
We had to let him go.
Actually, he came to the office last week super teed-off, yelling at us that we owed him money.
We're going to need his contact information, and for all your recent clients.
Sure.
But nobody would kill Peter over money.
Okay, me, I'm a hustler, basically but Peter was different.
It was never about money for him, not for a second.
He just wanted to help people.
Tenants were hearing noises at night, right? And they threatened to withhold rent.
So I called Spirit Trekkers.
And Suderman shows up with all this equipment.
Kids in the neighborhood were taunting our children, said the house we just moved into was haunted.
Got so Trent and Jane couldn't sleep in their own bedrooms.
It's the only haunted B&B in the Tri-State area.
We thought it would be an asset to get certification.
Kind of make it official.
What did Mr.
Suderman say? He went through the house very thoroughly, couldn't find a thing.
And he talked to our kids, too.
No more sleeping problems.
A lot cheaper than $175 an hour I spent on that child psychiatrist.
Suderman wouldn't certify us.
And so, what did you do? Went to another guy.
I gave him 80 bucks.
He signed off right away.
You must have been upset.
At first, but Suderman found the problem: faulty radiator caps.
You believe it? Anyway, a few changes later, no more chains clanging at midnight.
So far, it's not looking like one of his former clients.
And you talked to everybody? All except a doctor and his wife down in Richmond Hill.
Wife's been sick.
And then a couple of other clients are out of town.
Let's see if they were out of town during the murder.
How about the partner, Arthur Greene? His alibi checks out.
He had a meeting with his lawyers, then dinner until late.
So I got Gordon Kemp admitted up at QHC.
He's still going on about Dr.
Helen, but he's not being violent, he's got no history of violence.
I don't think this is the guy.
Okay.
And Suderman's cell phone and financials? Nothing much.
I got his credit card charges for the last two months.
Couple months? I spend more than this in two days.
But I pay my bill in full every month.
"Walker-Dunlap.
" What is that? There's a bunch of charges to them.
It's a forensics lab out in Jersey.
Suderman used 'em from time to time.
Did anything else happen here last night? It happened only Dr.
Helen.
Dr.
Helen? Gordon had an envelope addressed to Walker-Dunlap in his room.
Maybe he got it off of Suderman's body or out of his backpack.
Yep.
Al, we gotta get a look at that envelope.
I'll get Roe to pick it up.
All right, that was NYU.
They think they know where Denny Moskin might be.
I'll grab Nina and head down there.
Great.
Why don't you talk to that doctor and his wife? Sure.
Dr.
Barlow, I'm Lieutenant Burns.
- This is Detective Wells.
- Carrie.
We called? Right.
I already told the other detective.
My wife's not feeling well.
Well, that's why we came to you.
We thought we'd save you the trouble.
We just want to ask you a few questions about Peter Suderman.
Sure.
Come in.
Thanks.
It's terrible.
Suderman was a good man.
He was conducting an investigation for you? We had an issue.
We thought we had an issue.
But it's resolved now.
What kind of an issue, exactly? This is an old house.
Lots of creaks and groans, wind through the cracks.
Things that could be mistaken for something else.
Like ghosts? My wife thought she heard something coming from the basement.
Some kind of voice.
A voice? A woman's voice.
So we called Mr.
Suderman.
And he came, found nothing, we thanked him, and that was the end of it.
Was that the end of it for you, Janine? Of-of course.
How are you feeling, by the way? Better I hope.
Sorry? Anything else we can do for you, Detectives? You know, I was wondering what kind of medicine you practice.
Thoracic surgery, but I developed a slight tremor.
Nothing big.
I just, I had to close my practice about a year ago.
- Early retirement.
- Right.
We're planning a long overdue trip to Paris.
That's nice.
I was asking because, well, I was hoping you weren't a psychiatrist.
I don't want you to laugh when I ask if you mind if I look at the basement.
Why the basement? Well, you heard something in there, right? You don't believe me.
Oh, no, it's not that at all.
I just, I thought I'd take a look around.
The basement's not Janine's favorite place, but I'm happy to give you a tour.
That's an interesting place for a nap.
Oh, that.
Ever since Janine been talking ghosts, our nieces and nephews have come down here, try to sleep down here.
No one's made it through the night.
Yeah, not sure I would either.
Detective, I feel like there's something I should tell you.
For years my wife and I have been trying to have children.
Our last attempt ended in a miscarriage.
We learned it was a little girl.
I'm sorry.
I think Janine never really fully recovered.
I mean, this fixation, of course, has something to do with the baby.
She thinks it was her fault.
That's why I called Suderman.
Thought maybe it would help.
And did it? I think so, yes.
Dr.
Barlow, do you think it's possible that Suderman was having something related to your case tested at a forensics lab? Sorry uh, no.
Maybe we should go back upstairs.
I'm a little worried about Janine.
Police! Cut! Oh What is happening? Since when are there police? Dennis Moskin? Is it about the permits? Abby, did you file the permits? Okay, everybody, let's take a break.
I'm not budgeted for a break.
Are you budgeted for bail money?! Take ten.
This look familiar? Sure, that's Peter.
He's dead.
- For real? - Very real.
He was murdered last night in the Queens Park Sanitarium.
We have audio that makes it sound like you were there and a witness who says he saw the two of you getting into it the other day.
I didn't kill him.
Then why were you at the sanitarium? It was a joke.
I love a joke.
How does it go? I went, I went to the sanitarium 'cause I was pissed at Peter.
Because he fired you, right? Now, why did he do that? I don't know.
Mr.
Moskin, you are five seconds away from a long and expensive break in production.
Okay, I borrowed some equipment.
So you stole.
I was gonna use it in my film, and give it back.
But he got angry and fired me.
So I took some stuff out to the neoprene suit, some fiberglass to scatter the heat signature; created some kick-ass ghost effects.
When he realized it was me, he dropped the camera and came after me.
So, okay this this is you.
Yeah, that, that's actually pretty good, huh? Ah, wait a minute.
Go back a little bit.
There.
That, that's not me.
It's moving.
What is that? So, this is you.
but this is not you.
All right, so who else was there that night? Just the kooky homeless guy who lives there.
You realize how lame this story's sounding, Denny? I swear.
I just scared him.
He was alive when I left.
Look, I shot my own film of the whole thing.
You can look at it.
Now, now that is even lamer.
I must inform you gentlemen, whatever was or is in this envelope may obviously have been contaminated.
There's no chain of custody here, Tanya.
Just need to know what Suderman wanted tested.
Criminologist Tanya Sitkowksy.
I'm opening evidence bag marked 17 alpha 591 containing one padded manila envelope.
Approximately 20.
3 centimeters by 25.
4 centimeters.
Gives new meaning to the word "approximately.
" Contents include removing one synthetic bag What's inside the bag, Tanya? That's what we care about.
You can't rush science, Lieutenant.
I believe Archimedes said that.
I believe you say it every time we come down here.
It's a bone.
What kind of bone? A human bone if I'm not mistaken.
Give me a moment.
Or two.
Yes, a human finger would be more precise.
I would say the fifth distal phalanx from the right extremity.
Pinky finger.
It's hard to determine much more without complete skeletal and subdural remains.
As you might say, I need the dead guy.
Suderman found the pinky.
Where's the body? And who's the body? My guess, we find out, we find who killed him.
"A brief assessment of the dorsal surface indicates "non-granularity, lack of macroporosity, lack of striations," yada, yada.
Geez, Tanya.
"Almost certain identification of the subject" "as female, aged approximately Maybe those rumors about a mass grave under the sanitarium are true.
Except, as a minor, this girl never would have been admitted to Queens Park.
So let's run the DNA info through the index system, see if it ties to any open homicides.
Suderman could have picked up that bone anywhere.
Oh, and by the way, our film boy, Denny, it seems like he's in the clear.
I watched that stuff he shot the night of the murder.
And Suderman was scared, but they both end up laughing about the thing.
Wait a second.
This bone has trace amounts of zinc phosphide.
Zinc phosphide.
Of course! - Really, Roe? - All right, go ahead.
Zinc phosphide is one of the key ingredients found in rat poison.
The Barlows had rat traps all over their basement.
So you think Suderman found the bone in their basement? I think Janine heard a woman's voice coming from the basement.
Maybe he found the bone there.
Well, we're not getting a warrant based on a few rat traps and a ghost.
I'll talk to Arthur Green, his partner at Spirit Trekkers, and see if he knew anything.
And I'm gonna head to the Barlows', see what I can find out.
We should actually confirm that Suderman found the bone in their house before we do anything.
You're absolutely right.
You should try to confirm that.
Carrie I am not going to try to get into the house without a warrant.
I'm not! You heard that.
Dr.
Barlow.
Carrie Wells.
I remember.
Yeah, is Janine around? I wanted to ask you guys a few more questions regarding the Peter Suderman investigation.
Detective, my wife, she heard voices A voice, actually.
The man came to the house.
He didn't find anything.
I'm sorry that he died.
But I don't see how I can help you.
You know, we have a piece of evidence recovered from your basement that could be connected to Peter Suderman's murder.
What piece of evidence? I'd really like to talk to your wife.
She's inside, with a headache.
Asleep.
She gets terrible headaches.
Migraines.
A piece of potentially crucial evidence was found inside your basement.
Me? I'd want to get to the bottom of that as soon as possible.
I'm not going to dignify that with a response.
I thought we had an understanding.
I'm gonna go into my house now.
I suggest you get off my property.
Hey.
Where the hell are you? Outside the Barlow house.
Good.
How we doing on that warrant? DA says we're close.
Close? You know, Al? I'm think I'm hearing an argument going on inside.
No, you're not.
Oh yeah.
It's getting pretty heated in there.
Carrie, don't even think about it Oh, see, now I hear glass breaking.
No, you don't! She sounds like she might be in trouble, I think we got exigent circumstances here Carrie, you can't go in there.
Al? Al? I think I lost you No, you didn't lose me! Listen to me! Damn reception.
Please wake up.
Please, wake up! Come on.
Oh, thank God, you're okay.
Oh where am I? My head ow.
What happened? Sam.
He was afraid you were gonna tell someone.
That I was gonna tell someone.
Tell them what? About her.
Oh, you gotta untie me.
Uh where does it where's my gun? He took it.
After he knocked you out.
He was furious.
Then he made me come down here.
Oh, God He knows I can hear her crying.
That's why he locks me down here.
To punish me.
He's done this before? For days, sometimes.
You gotta help me up.
Ah, God You shouldn't have come back here.
We're gonna get out of here.
All right.
Do you hear her? No.
It's so dark where she is.
She's afraid of the dark.
She's crying Janine, listen to me.
Look at me.
No one's going to hurt you.
Okay? We are getting out of here.
We're gonna die.
He's going to kill us both.
The M.
E.
got a DNA match on that bone.
A runaway from upstate Lily Mueller.
She was 14 when she left.
Her mother's on her way.
That's a shame.
Anybody heard from Carrie? I tried her cell a couple of times, went straight to voicemail.
Wanted to tell her that Janine Barlow's medical records don't say anything about a miscarriage.
Roe, get over to the Barlow house, make sure Carrie's not in it.
I can't unlock this door.
I'm sorry, Carrie.
I deserve to be here, not you.
That's ridiculous.
I knew what he did.
In my heart I always knew.
And I never said a word.
The girl.
Who is she? Her name was Lily.
I met her in the park.
She was living there, she ran away from home.
I know I should have called the police, but we started talking, and she told me about her life.
I felt sorry for her.
So I asked her to come here and help around the house.
Have a roof over her head.
She was so sweet.
She made this old, dead house feel alive.
I always wanted a little girl of my own.
But Sam wanted her too.
And when I confronted him, he was furious.
He denied it.
But I knew.
The next day, she was gone.
He told me he'd fired her.
But he didn't.
I found a pair of sneakers, in the garbage behind the house.
There was blood on them.
I think it was his way of telling me without telling me.
I know it sounds crazy.
But ever since then, I've been hearing her cries.
But you don't hear them.
- Janine, Janine, Janine, Janine - No one does.
I'm gonna get us out of here.
Okay, we're going to get out of here, there's always a way.
I just wish I had some light.
Oh.
Uh Here.
I keep this hidden.
Because sometimes he cuts out the light.
This is great.
Okay.
This'll help.
Let's see See? He's trying to kill us! Janine, Janine, Janine, look at me.
I want you to stay focused on me, all right? I want you to think really hard.
Is there any way out of this basement? There's got to be some way out.
Yes.
- Okay? - Yes, there is.
- Where? - There.
There.
It's a crawl space that runs under the entire house.
But I've, I've been afraid to use it.
Sorry.
Hang on.
Take this, hold it.
All right.
Okay Okay.
Come on.
Come on Oh! That's not gonna work.
No.
No.
No, no, no.
No.
Listen to me, Janine.
I'll find another way.
There is no other way.
Hang on a second.
These old houses were built for coal, right? The question is how do you get the coal to the basement? Coal chute.
Boom.
Hold this.
All right.
Come on! Lily! Janine, come on.
Go.
Go, now, go! Isn't that your husband's car? - Yes! - Why's his car still here? That doesn't make any - He's still inside.
- No.
It's not possible.
I want you to stay here, - and call 911.
- Where are you going? No! Carrie, don't.
- I'm going to get him.
Call 911! - Carrie! Carrie! Please! Hey.
Come on, wake up.
Carrie? I'm over here.
Come on.
Here.
So Sam Barlow's still in intensive care.
When they think he's up to it, they're going to transfer him to the prison ward at Bellevue.
Okay, so husband kills a girl.
Suderman found part of the body.
Guy sets fire to take out his wife, destroy the evidence.
What's he doing still in the house? Had to get liquored up to do it.
Never got out.
The findings on the doctor's bag in Sam Barlow's trunk.
Got a bloody scalpel.
They're checking for prints.
Gonna match the blood to Suderman's, but that's a no-brainer.
And the mud on his tires looks like a match to the mud outside the sanitarium.
Yeah, but why's the guy hire a ghost hunter to look around right where he's buried the girl? Ah classic arrogance of the nonbeliever.
See, Barlow's a doctor, a man of science.
He thinks Suderman's a quack, gonna let him come in, sniff around a little, calm the wife down, send him on his way.
Then the bone shows up, and it's like Katy bar the door.
Okay, but even you gotta admit there's no ghost in this story.
- Yeah? - Yeah.
Then what's the wife hearing down in the basement, huh? You tell me.
Did you just say, "Katy bar the door"? Yeah.
It's like an expression, you know.
Like, uh, "Get out my face.
" Like, "Talk to the fist 'cause the hand is pissed.
" What the hell are you doing here? I'm okay.
Turns out you don't use the back of your head for very much.
Mike tells me you went back in to save Barlow's life.
No, I went back in to get my badge and my gun.
Barlow just happened to be there.
At least he won't be around Janine anymore, right? We got her in touch with a friend from nursing school.
Put them both up in a hotel for now.
Good.
Look, I know you're gonna do what you're gonna do, but going back into a burning house? Sometimes it feels like you want to get hurt.
Al, he was in the house, just lying there.
What was I supposed to do? You could've died.
But I didn't.
I didn't know you cared so much.
Hate to lose a good detective.
Really? Yup.
Hey.
Don't know if you still need it, but I did more work on the thermal footage that other shape in the background that Mike showed me.
So I called a friend at NASA who gave me this algorithm Tanya Sorry.
Uh I was able enhance it.
Turns out it's a flashlight.
Right, but it's thermal.
Wouldn't it show up super bright? Yeah, if it was on.
This one was off.
So, what you're seeing is the vestigial heat pattern.
- What are the spots? - Multiple bulbs.
LED, halogen, some of those fancy new ones.
Can you tell what kind of flashlight this is? I'm ahead of you.
Based on bulb placement and light source, there are only a few on the market that could produce this heat pattern, but I'd say based on size and design of the head chassis, there's really only one.
The Powerstream 4800.
I keep this hidden 'cause sometimes he cuts out the lights.
She walks up and down the hall with a black stick.
She blinds you with it.
That's what she does.
Janine had one of these flashlights in her basement.
- Can I borrow this? - Sure.
Why the basement? You don't believe me.
Please wake up.
Thank God you're okay.
- I'm going inside.
- Don't.
Carrie, don't.
Please don't.
Hey, it's Carrie.
When we processed Dr.
Barlow, did you check his blood alcohol level? Zero.
Just like I thought.
- Thank you.
- All right, listen to this.
Janine Barlow was a surgical nurse.
She was dismissed from her last position because of a violent incident.
It wasn't him.
She's the one who knocked me out.
She's the one who set the fire.
She was trying to kill him.
And herself.
She locked herself in the basement.
Without you, she would've died down there.
There's a crawl space that runs under the entire house.
No.
No-no-no.
No No.
She thought she had a way out, but the fire spread too quickly.
She was surprised.
Call Nina.
Tell her to get over to the hotel where she put Janine.
Wait.
She won't be there.
She tried to kill him once.
She's gonna go to the hospital and finish the job.
All right, we'll call security on the way.
Excuse me.
Where is Sam Barlow? I think Louis took him downstairs for inhalation therapy.
Are there any other elevators in this area? There's one around the corner and another one down the hall.
I got this one.
All right.
- Louis? - Yeah.
Where's Sam Barlow? The other nurse told me I was supposed to come back, and she'd take him downstairs.
Nurse.
This way? Yeah.
Janine! Janine Janine.
Janine, listen to me.
Put the knife down.
Put it down.
He was gonna tell you everything.
No.
He was trying to protect you.
No! Janine, hey.
Okay.
Put the knife down.
I loved him.
I loved him.
He just wanted her.
He lied for you for years.
For years.
Think about that.
That's gotta mean something, right? I I I just want to go home.
Put the knife down, and we can all go home together.
All right? Just put the knife down.
That's all you have to do, and we can go.
I can't.
Yes, you can.
She's waiting for me.
No, Janine.
No.
She's waiting for him! Janine.
You okay? Yeah.
I just want to get out of here.
How about him? He's okay.
Get a little help over here! I'm all right.
Just a You're gonna need stitches.
Did I mention I hate needles? Ah, quit being a baby, will you? I'm not getting in that thing.
I got this.
Wheelchair? I thought I'd find you up here.
So Barlow's awake and talking.
He confesses to hiding the body of Lily Mueller but not to killing her.
That was Janine.
Jealousy.
According to Barlow, there was no reason.
She made it all up.
What about Suderman? When Barlow realized she'd killed him, he didn't have the heart to cover for her again.
He told her as much, that he was gonna come clean to us.
So he had to die.
You know, she told me she loved him.
- Strange way of showing it.
- Yeah.
Burning him alive.
Yeah, I'm more of a red roses kind of girl.
Weird thing with Janine, she didn't know the body was down there, but she was hearing things.
Let me ask you.
After all these years since your sister died, you ever feel, I don't know, you ever get a feeling? Are you asking me if I believe in ghosts? Yeah, I guess I am.
I want to believe that there's more after we die, you know.
I want to believe that Rachel is still here in some way.
And sometimes I can feel her so close, like she's all around me.
I can feel her, like I can just reach out an-and touch her, almost.
And I know she's there.
I do.
I just I wish What? I wish she'd say hello.
Hmm.