![]() ![]() She lost her money after her financial adviser, Bernie (whose look and story bear a striking resemblance to Bernie Madoff, convicted swindler and former stockbroker) went to prison. The Countess has an insidious plan, which she reveals to Duffy when he confronts her. Before she leaves, though, the Countess, pleased with herself, informs Drake that he has an erection. Drake, however, is gay, but that doesn’t stop her. The Countess and Drake have a night out on the town, and when they get back, the Countess makes her move on him. The Countess saves Drake just in the nick of time, because it’s not Duffy who’s meant to seduce him. After she tells him that she doesn’t know who she is if she isn’t his mother, Donovan tells her she should kill herself - advice that, as we see later, she takes to heart.īack in the world of the Countess, however, the unpredictable Duffy attempts to seduce Will Drake (Cheyenne Jackson) with intentions of killing him, Duffy’s new-found favorite hobby. Donovan, who seems to become more of a brat the more he’s around his mother, rips into her without mercy. Iris reveals that she left Donovan’s father, but Donovan idolized him. More significantly, though, Alex sees Holden, who doesn’t run when he sees her: He simply greets her with a chilling “Hi, Mommy.”ĭonovan (Matt Bomer), though, isn’t in good shape, and his mother, Iris (Kathy Bates), seems positively overjoyed that he’s been dumped by the Countess. And, because no one is really ever dead at the Hotel Cortez, she runs into Claudia, who, even in death, manages to insult her outfit. She does for a while, but leaves after he suggests they have another baby. He becomes hysterical and begs her to stay. John is thrown another curveball when Alex stops by to serve him with divorce papers. Sally even brings up the 10 Commandments herself, saying that “killing can be a righteous act.” After seducing John in the elevator, Sally manages to escape from him, possibly with the help of the drill-bit-dildo-wearing Addiction Demon. The detective, looking for answers, heads back to the hotel to arrest Sally, and by this point, it seems more unusual to see Sally without tears than with them. He thought it was Sally, who trapped him in the mattress. At the hospital, Gabriel reveals that it wasn’t Claudia who he meant to kill. John later returns to the hotel and finds a distraught Gabriel, who begs for help even though he is the one who just became a murderer. Their tongues are nailed to the desks, and as John points out, the killer was probably carrying out the “Thou shalt not bare false witness” commandment. He and his detectives find a brutal scene at an office of a gossip site, finding several journalists brutally murdered (and they’re only the latest journalists to be killed off in the last episode, a Gold Derby blogger was the victim of a murder). John’s distracted by another crime scene, though, one undoubtedly caused by the 10 Commandments Killer. Scarlett says Holden smelled like lavender when she saw him, and that he didn’t have “normal feelings” - and she’s probably not wrong.Īfter that comes the next Hotel Cortez victim: Claudia (Naomi Campbell), who is killed after Max Greenfield’s Gabriel (remember him?) emerges from her mattress and stabs her to death. Unsurprisingly, John is the only one who is willing to listen (for obvious reasons). In a flashback, we even see her slit her wrists in a bathtub after his disappearance, only to be found by John.Īnd still, no one believes Scarlett when she says she saw Holden at the hotel. It’s clear Alex’s addiction, as everyone on the show seems to have one, is Holden, and she can’t bear to live without him. Alex says herself that she loved him more than anyone else, even more than her husband, John, or her daughter, Scarlett. Alex had a troubled childhood, so she devotes herself to children, though none more than her missing son, Holden. Meanwhile, Alex Lowe (Chloe Sevigny) is dealing with a child patient who contracted measles after his mother wouldn’t vaccinate him. The media referred to Holmes’ place of killing as his “Murder Castle.” Holmes, the serial killer on whom March is based. March refers to the hotel as his “murder palace,” and it’s a noticeable throwback to season one, widely referred to as “Murder House.” It’s also another clear reference to H.H. ![]()
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