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(busy signal beeping)
(beeping stops)
What... what did they say?
They're going to charge me with criminal child neglect.
They're going to take him away.
Place him in an institution.
My boy.
My Beauregard.
(sobs softly)
Now, you know how he is.
I know.
How he suffers so when he's not with me.
If you have any feelings for me at all...
You know I love you.
I would do anything for you.
Then do it.
Like we discussed.
Beau?
You should be in bed.
Beau, you want to play.
(claps)
(raspy breathing)
It's too late for games, Beau.
Come on.
Time to sleep.
Perchance to dream.
For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come.
Now, close your eyes.
God help me.
(grunting)
Are we having another tough day?
No, we're fine.
Just eager to get the results.
Of course. You must be very anxious.
You know, we want
to make sure everything's okay with the baby.
You didn't see
anything unusual--
hooves or anything?
What?
Not at all.
And, Dr. Harmon, that's not a ridiculous fear.
Every pregnant woman worries
they've got a little devil in them.
Now, I don't want you to get all worked up, Vivien.
You're having twins.
What?
Twins?
And they're both perfectly healthy.
Congratulations.
MARCY: The house is a classic
L.A. Victorian.
These are real Tiffany fixtures.
Everything was meticulously restored
by a couple of the previous homos.
Owners.
Homeowners.
*** have such a great eye for detail, don't they?
A *** eye.
Let me show you the kitchen.
Please help yourself to nibbles.
I don't see you on the brochure.
You come with the house?
Uh, she does, actually.
This is Moira.
She's worked for consecutive owners of the house.
Uh, Vivien Harmon.
Mr. Escandarian was in the neighborhood
to look at that gaudy Mediterranean two blocks up.
It's about two-thirds the size of this place,
and they want almost twice as much.
Of course, the Mediterranean has a swimming pool.
There's room for a pool here.
I'll have to tear out that gazebo.
I think that's a fine idea.
A swimming pool would be just the thing.
How deep would you make it?
Very deep.
MOIRA: Good.
I like it deep.
You'd have to dig up the entire yard.
VIVIEN: Uh, Mr. Escandarian,
would you like to see the rest of the house?
Actually, I just have one question:
what's wrong with this place?
The land alone is worth as much as you're asking.
Mrs. Harmon is a motivated seller.
VIVIEN: Um, and I would
also like to be candid with you
that this house has a history
that I find troubling.
The people who lived here before died here, violently,
and apparently they weren't the only ones.
So I just want to be very straightforward with you
about that, if you are in fact interested.
I am interested.
If it looks like
you're going to get a serious offer
before you hear from me, let me know.
I'll be in touch.
MOIRA: I'll see you to the door.
If you decide soon, you might have your pool by summer.
(door closes)
Are you trying to crush my commission?
I'm trying to be honest, unlike you.
Why don't we just include a ticket for the *** Tour
along with the *** flyer?
That's a really good idea.
Because you know what? I think it would be
really good for us to know
exactly what happened in this house.
(door closes)
What is that?
Excuse me.
Ah. This where the open house is?
Yes.
Ah, what a lovely spread.
The open house is over.
Says from 2:00 to 6:00.
It's only 4:00 now.
It's by appointment only.
Oh. I see.
It's because of my affliction, isn't it?
Sometimes I wonder, if I knew how much I was
going to be shunned, if I would have run back
onto that burning school bus to save those children.
Now this crudité is making my mouth dry.
I'm going to have a little glass of this Chardonnay,
and then you may show me the house.
Put down the stemware.
What are you doing?
A woman in my line can't be
too careful.
There are a lot of minority men in this city
who would like nothing more
than to ravage me on this counter top.
Get out.
Put the gun down, Marcy.
I don't like guns. Put the gun down.
Yes, Marcy. I hope you're permitted for that,
as I will be
mentioning it in my lawsuit.
What you're doing is in direct violation
of The Americans with Disabilities Act.
And this is the library.
Oh.
Oh... that's...
that's quite a fireplace.
I'm very interested in that fireplace.
Yes, it's gas.
Yeah.
I'll turn it on for you.
Oh. Okay.
(gasps)
Wonderful.
Wonderful.
Yes.
I'm very interested
in this house.
Although I'm not sure about
the wallpaper.
I find that rice paper
very cheap.
You know what would look great in here?
A mural.
Yeah.
(sultry, bluesy intro playing on piano)
♪ I want a little sugar in my bowl... ♪
(panting)
♪ I want a little sweetness down in my soul ♪
♪ I could stand some loving oh, so bad ♪
♪ I feel so funny... ♪
(moans)
Oh, feels so good, babe.
(both moaning)
♪ I want a little steam on my clothes... ♪
(moaning)
(song ends)
Stop it!
Let me see that.
You're right.
It is.
You mutilating yourself.
Not anymore.
Promise me
you'll never cut yourself again.
I promise.
They planned some brutal family dinner for tonight.
Like it's going to make me feel better.
Do you believe in ghosts?
Why are you asking me?
I don't know.
It can't all be ***, right?
There's got to be someplace better,
somewhere.
For people like you, at least.
Not you?
Ever since you got here, this is the better place.
You're not eating anything.
I'mnot hungry.
Pretty stuffed on ***.
BEN: Your mother and I know that you're upset.
Maybe there's some things you want to talk about.
Like who I'm going to live with after you get divorced?
Is there a third option?
'Cause both of you
kind of make me want to kill myself.
Is that what you guys are afraid of?
Why else would you want to try
to actually deal with the problem?
You never leave your room.
You barely eat.
These are textbook signs of depression.
We're very concerned, Vi.
Look, you guys drag me all the way out here
to save our family,
then you decide to break up.
You buy a house that I actually like, then you're telling me
you're selling it, without even asking me what I want.
So, fine, I'm depressed.
But I'm not going to off myself.
So, you can go back to your policy of benign neglect.
Maybe we should stop trying to sell this place.
I don't know.
I mean, was that so much worse than usual?
Given the circumstances.
We need to stay on her, but we are selling this house.
If that's, if that's even possible.
We have two prospective buyers.
One guy who's Persian, I think.
And the other?
The other guys has this
really badly burned face; I felt terrible for him.
And I'm going on the *** House Tour with Marcy
so that I can get all the details
of what happened in this house
and give full disclosure before anyone commits.
You're only required by law to disclose anything
that happened in the last three years.
I know. But I'm not knowingly putting someone through
what we've been through.
But you've got him on the hook.
You tell him about all the insanity in this place,
you're gonna blow the sale.
It's the right thing to do.
The right thing to do is
to get out from under this mess, so we can pick up the pieces,
so our daughter can.
It must be so great to be able to do that,
to just flick a switch
and be able to justify your own bad behavior.
Since when?
Do not screw up selling this house.
(doorbell rings)
Hello.
Moira is it?
How did I know you'd be back?
I haven't been able to get this house out of my mind.
Mrs. Harmon is out.
But I'd be happy to show you whatever you want to see.
(chuckles)
As you can see,
this room belongs to a sad, depressed teenager.
But it has real potential.
I'd paint it a deep, dark red,
clear out all the furniture
and hang a sex swing.
(grunting)
My kind of girl.
It's always been a fantasy of mine
to swim naked in a heated pool...
when I'm not tending to your needs, of course.
Somebody mentioned a pool.
I'm a little curious about you.
I've always heard Persians have big, thick ***.
Something a girl can gnaw on.
Yeah, no teeth, though.
And I'm not Persian, by the way.
I'm Armenian.
Oh! Oh, your hands are nice.
Oh! Not rough like most maids.
Believe me, Mr. Joe,
I'm not like any household help you've known.
You'll never want to leave this house.
(moaning)
What are you doing in my daughter's room?
And who's this?
Dr. Harmon,
meet Mr. Joe Escandarian.
He's about to put an offer on the house.
Oh, so great to meet you.
What are you doing here?
Oh, just picking up some clothes.
I can say, without any hesitation,
we've been very happy here; it's a very special house.
Truthfully, it's all inventory to me.
I'm gonna bring in bulldozers,
turn it into units. (clicks tongue)
Great idea.
Hello, Larry.
Jesus!
Ben?
(chuckles)
You scared me half to death.
(both chuckle)
It's unnerving to have someone just show up
How'd you get in here?
It's amazing what 20 bucks will buy you in this neighborhood.
You came back to my house, Larry.
You bothered my wife.
It was an open house. I'm an interested buyer.
And what are you gonna buy it with?
The thousand dollars you've been trying to extort from me?
You're not buying anything.
You don't know everything about me.
I know you're a liar, Larry.
You never went to prison for murdering your family.
I checked out your story.
You were in a burn ward for two years,
then you were institutionalized.
You lied about everything.
They're not lies.
They did die in that house.
But you didn't kill them.
Just like you didn't kill Hayden.
It's all been lies.
You know that not everything has been a lie.
You know that that house has power.
Nescafé?
It's true I tried
to scare you out of the house,
but I was only doing it for your own good.
Right. The house is evil. Now you want to buy it.
That's *** right!
I need that house!
I need it!
That is the only place I have any hope to ever be happy again.
With her.
I finally got the girls down.
Sit down, Lorraine. We need to talk.
There's only really one way to say this--
I've fallen in love with somebody else.
I didn't mean for it to happen.
Do I know her?
Constance, from next door.
She's very beautiful.
I suppose if I were a man, I would love her, too.
Are you going to leave us?
Actually, I think that
you should take the girls
and go back to Ohio
and move in with your mother.
And I will provide for you always.
(voice breaks): You're going to move her into my house?
It was her house before.
I can't live without her.
Lorraine?
Lorraine?
(gasps)
Open this door! Are the girls in there with you?!
Lorraine! Lorraine!
Oh!
Oh, my God! Oh, my God! Oh, my God! Oh, my God!
(screams)
Constance?
All this for Constance?
She's the most exciting woman I've ever met.
I need that house, Ben.
We have a buyer, a real buyer with real money.
And he's gonna pull the whole *** thing down.
And after everything that's happened,
that can only be good.
No! No...
No, you can't let him do that.
I can and I will.
And as soon as I leave here,
I'm gonna report you to the police
and file a restraining order.
Game over.
STAN: On a foggy Sunday night, June 12, 1994,
two people were viciously murdered
in front of this luxurious Brentwood condo. The victims?
Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.
The accused murderer?
Nicole's ex-husband-- Orenthal James Simpson;
"O.J." to the world.
Although he was acquitted after a lengthy trial,
O.J. will forever remain suspect.
I'm so glad you brought me on this tour, Vivien.
It's given me hope.
How?
No matter how gruesome or horrible the ***,
you can always find somebody out there who'll buy the house.
Next stop on our tour of departed souls...
"*** House."
And ladies and gentlemen, we have
a celebrity here on the bus today,
the current owner of *** House.
(weak laugh)
You left us rather suddenly on your last visit.
Well, I thought the story was so great,
I wanted to come hear the rest of it.
Let's jump right in. *** House,
built by Dr. Charles and Nora Montgomery.
They lived there with their son Thaddeus.
That is, until the baby was kidnapped
and found dismembered.
If Mother could see me now...
polishing my own silver...
Charles, look at me.
Oh, I wish I were a widow.
I certainly look the part.
I bought this dress for my mother's funeral.
Who ever thought I'd be wearing it again...
to bury my son.
That's not true.
Because of you and what you did,
we'll have to forego an open casket.
Nora, I'm trying to tell you something.
There will be no funeral.
The baby is upstairs
and waiting for you in the nursery.
(floorboards creak)
Thaddeus?
(gurgling, hissing)
Oh!
(inhaling deeply)
(wheezes, coughs)
I was wrong about you, Charles.
You are a genius.
How long I've waited to hear you say that.
All I wanted was to prove myself.
How on earth did you do it?
I used the beating heart from one of our girls.
Amazing.
Nora... where's the baby?
I thought he was hungry.
I tried to nurse him,
but it wasn't milk he was craving.
We're damned, Charles,
because of what we did
to those girls.
Those poor, innocent girls
and their babies.
That thing upstairs-- it's not human.
No.
I tried.
I stabbed it with a letter opener,
but it clung to life, Charles.
No! I finally succeeded at something!
We'll alert the media at once.
Hold a press conference.
Of course.
I'm proud of you, Charles.
(sobbing)
You are a man, after all.
STAN: Legend has it that the ghost of Nora Montgomery
still haunts these very halls,
as does her beloved-- if mutilated-- toddler.
The Montgomery ***-suicide
was only the first of many
to occur behind these bloody walls.
Let's not put that in the listing.
Agh... I've been taking the B6, it's just...
it's not helping.
And I'm fine when I'm at my house.
It's just when I leave my house, I get so sick.
Maybe it's your body's way of telling you to stay home.
I think I'm just worried
that there's something wrong with these babies.
I really... I want to take that CVS test.
You've already had the amnio.
It'll make me feel better.
I'd like to; let's schedule it for this week.
Okay.
Thank you.
Got your flowers.
(wry chuckle)
They smelled of the gas station where you bought them.
Red roses?
Could you be more of a pathetic, cheap cliché?
The card said to meet you at "our" house?
(wry laugh)
This was never our house.
It was my house.
And then it was yours.
You've got something to tell me?
Then do it.
Up close and personal.
Oh...
Oh, I've seen you.
Skulking around outside.
Have you seen my new beau?
He's so handsome, isn't he?
Yes.
Come here.
I want to see your shame.
Come closer.
So I can get a good look at you.
I bet the kiddies scatter like little buggies
when you walk down the street.
I love you.
Ugh.
You're disgusting.
You're weak.
You let this place get the better of you.
The house didn't do this to me.
You did this to me.
If I catch you peeping in my windows one more time,
I'm going to send Travis out
to ruin the other half of your face.
They're selling the house.
No matter.
I've told you... no one can own this house.
No one ever will. He's tearing it down.
And then who knows what will happen
to all the ones who reside in here?
(chain rattling)
(chain rattling)
Hello?
Play!
(screams)
You're scaring her.
Go away!
(raspy gasping)
Violet, it's okay.
Calm down, okay?
(sighs)
I feel like I'm totally losing it.
They're from the past.
The ghosts of people who've died here.
They're appearing to you now because you're evolved.
Don't be scared.
All you have to do is tell them to go away.
And they will.
You really know your way around this house.
I guess I do.
I've been exploring after my sessions.
Don't tell your dad.
Look at all this great *** I found.
(lisping): And check this out.
I think gay *** is hot.
Totally.
What's in the other box?
♪ ♪
Look what he did to me.
Go away!
Oh. Mr. Escandarian.
How nice of you to agree to see me.
You have such a lovely home. It, um...
I don't know.
I beg your pardon?
For your house. I get it. I'm riding in on my white horse
to rescue those people from their ***.
Make me an offer. I'm into it.
I can tear your house down and put up a car port.
You know, I would love a drink.
Double ***, no ice.
You're not from California, are you?
I'm from Armenia.
My family moved to Beverly Hills when I was two.
Used to be no one was from here.
People came here to escape their pasts.
Find a plot of land that not even
a red Indian had set foot on
and make a new life for yourself.
Give me a number.
I want history, I'll go talk to Gene Autry.
But now there are no more *** plots.
We live on top of each other.
That's California now...
and that's the world.
There is no more space, and yet it's human nature to want to
claim your own turf.
So build away, we do.
Every time you put up
one of these... monstrous temples
to the gods of travertine,
you're building on top of someone else's life.
I'm a developer.
I improved on the past.
I build a new future.
You should show some respect.
You're not an archeologist.
You should stop unearthing while you're ahead.
It only brings a haunting.
We have a responsibility
as caretakers to the old lands...
to show some respect.
Cemeteries are for the past.
This is my time.
You can't tear down that house.
If you want to keep it so bad, buy it.
Well, not all of us have been as fortunate as you.
Then *** off!
You come into my house and insult me,
and give me a history lesson,
and I'm supposed to back out of a deal
that's going to make me millions?
There are three reasons I deal with women:
sex, money, or making me sandwiches.
And unless you're planning on going into my kitchen
and slapping some ham between two slices of bread...
this conversation is over.
One day, your time's going to end.
And they'll be building on top of you, too.
TATE: You know, I really like talking to you, Dr. Harmon.
You've helped me a lot.
Maybe it's the drugs.
I don't have any more visions.
I think it might have just been like a...
like a screwy chemical imbalance.
And of course, the parenting.
Well, I'm glad you feel so much better, Tate.
I really am.
Our session's over for today.
Look, I, uh...
I need to ask you something.
Off the clock.
And I have no right. But... I'm desperate.
I'm worried about Violet.
I get that.
She's your daughter.
But, you know, she's not a little girl anymore.
And at some point...
you're gonna have to let her go.
She won't talk to me anymore.
She's been through a lot.
She talks to you. I know she talks to you.
What I'm getting at, Tate, is
if Violet is in trouble, real trouble,
please come to me right away.
I don't want to lose her.
I can't.
I wouldn't survive it.
I wish you were my father.
My life would have been a lot different.
What do you want?
I need to speak to my son.
I believe he had a session with Dr. Harmon today.
That ended.
But I'm sure the little psycho is still
skulking around here somewhere.
You missed a spot.
So did you.
You've been crying.
Good.
(bottle sprays)
Tate?
Tate, honey?
What do you want?
Oh...
Well, I wanted to see you.
Are you feeling any better?
Are the visits with the good doctor helping you?
Yeah.
We're really getting to the root of the problem.
Turns out I hate my mother.
Beau?
Come here, darling.
Sit down with me, darling.
My beautiful boy.
My handsome boy.
Mama's got to say good-bye.
They're going to take you away from me.
They're going to take everything away forever.
Oh.
My sweet boy.
It'll be okay.
Well... you think you're being
very crafty, don't you?
Throwing yourself at that greasy Persian.
But you've been too clever by half.
He says he's building me a swimming pool.
And when they dig up that backyard
and find my bones, you'll go to prison.
There's not going to be a swimming pool, you stupid ***.
There won't even be a house.
He plans to tear the whole thing down
and put up affordable housing.
He's going to seal your tomb for good.
I don't believe you.
Well, it's true.
He told me so himself.
And while I would normally
rejoice at the thought of you
spending eternity scrubbing out low-flow toilets
in government- subsidized housing,
there's every chance that when these walls come down,
I am going to lose my family forever.
And I won't have that.
He lied to me.
(laughs)
Well, of course he lied to you.
Why do they always lie?
It's in their nature.
They can't help it.
But we can help each other.
What do you want me to do?
What you do best.
(soft knocking)
Sure nobody's home?
They're upstairs, tucked in tight.
Ever since you called,
all I can think about is that sweet mouth of yours.
I've had it all over the world, baby.
You're the best.
Lucky you-- I'm hungry again.
Let's go someplace where no one can hear us.
Kind of dark down here.
Puts me in the mood to do bad things.
Uh-huh.
No more talk, baby.
Ah...
That is nice.
(grunts)
Little less teeth.
(grunts)
(shrieking)
(muffled yells)
After all these years, Moira,
I have finally come to appreciate your talent.
Is he dead yet?
Not quite yet.
Well, make sure he's off the property before he expires.
I wouldn't care
to encounter his carcass ever again.
(knocking at door)
Can I come in?
So it looks like, uh...
this guy's pretty serious about buying the house.
I mean, we won't know officially until it's
actually in escrow, but...
I wanted to talk to you about it.
Well, then what?
Then I think...
you and I will go stay with your Aunt Jo
till we find a place.
What about Dad?
Well, Dad still has patients,
and...
I don't really know, sweetheart.
We haven't figured it all out yet.
This wasn't the way it was supposed to go, honey.
Your dad and I really loved each other.
How'd you know you loved him when you first met?
Well, he was...
he was handsome and kind.
But I don't know. The thing is,
when you fall in love, it's kind of like you go crazy,
and before you know it, the whole world looks different,
and then you'll do anything for the other person.
Why do you ask?
No reason.
Look at this.
Wow.
Yeah.
When it was first built.
Where'd you find all this stuff?
In the attic.
That's the original owners.
Nora and Charles Montgomery.
Are you the woman of the house?
Matches my eyes, doesn't it?
Captioning sponsored by 20th CENTURY FOX
Captioned by Media Access Group at WGBH access.wgbh.org