Bones s02e10 Episode Script

The Headless Witch in the Woods

[Brennan.]
It's getting thicker and thicker in here.
That's why the forensic team got lost.
I've sent somebody back to find 'em.
You sure you know where you're goin'? I still have trouble, and I've been here for three years.
That's why we advise hikers to stay away.
I know I'm pining for concrete.
You just, uh You stay close, all right, Bones? I don't want you to get caught out here when it gets dark, okay? Bones? Bones? Where the hell are you? Bones? I'm right here, Booth.
- Don't do that, all right? - What? - Take off like that, okay? You heard the guy.
- I saw this.
It's some sort of talisman.
These are bones from a bird.
And the coloring on the ornament looks like dried blood.
There are more of'em too.
[Booth.]
These, they look like eyes.
- Okay, this is weird.
You see a lot of these? - Not me.
But I've heard some other folks have come across some pretty strange stuff in here.
- Word is it's Maggie Cinders.
- There's a woman who lives out here? Did.
Died in 1780.
Folks around here thought she was a witch and beheaded her.
Legend is she still haunts the woods looking for her severed head.
And you believe this, Ranger Edison? Look, I'm just telling you what I heard.
Yeah, I'd prefer we keep moving, okay? [Edison.]
This is one of the only clearings around here.
The pit was covered with sticks and leaves.
One of the hikers fell in on the body, freaked, and ran.
Maggie Cinders did say she'd kill anybody who dared to look for her.
So you talked to Miss Cinders? That must've been difficult since she doesn't have a head.
Bag the eyes.
Give me a hand.
You want me to go down there with you? - No.
I don't want the remains compromised.
- You all right? - Yeah.
- [Insects Buzzing.]
So, uh, how'd she kill 'em, you know, in the legend? Like she was killed.
She cuts off their heads.
Iliac crest and pubis show it's male.
Epiphyseal fusion puts him between 18 and 25 years old.
He's on a a video camera.
Cause of death? Well, since I can't find his skull I'd say his head got cut off.
Since we don't have a head, do we have enough for an identification? We'll look for older injuries that might be found in medical records.
More wood splinters.
Could've been the handle of whatever lopped off his head.
If a ghost isn't comprised of matter but is merely ectoplasm which is actually the clear outer layer of cytoplasm on amoeboid cells how can the victim have suffered bruising and multiple fractures? Because there are no such things as ghosts.
I thought you never jump to conclusions? Well, it's safe to dismiss fantasy and deluded perceptions.
My mother came to me the day after she died.
I wasn't some kid.
I was 23.
She came to me She came to me and told me to look in her dresser third drawer, behind her pink blouse.
There was something there for me.
[Hodgins.]
The European hornet queen I found on the remains puts the time of death at November of last year.
- We have more splinters.
- Wood.
It's from a Betula uber a subspecies of round-leafbirch tree that's been extinct since 1800.
The legend says that Maggie Cinders kills her victims with the same old ax used to decapitate her in 1783.
Anyone else feeling tingly, or is it just me? I checked missing persons.
A film student from U.
V.
A.
went missing in the woods last year.
He was making a documentary on the Maggie Cinders legend.
Graham Hastings, 21, 5'10", 176 pounds.
- That explains the video camera.
- [Angela.]
I, um I got something from the videotape.
I cleaned a section of the tape with an isopropyl alcohol solution and fed whatever digital information I could salvage into a restoration program.
- I didn't get much.
- [Woman Screams.]
Maybe I got too much.
- Brian? Brian! - [Chopping Sounds.]
[Man.]
Lori, wait! Where are you going? Lori, stop! - Stop, Lori! - [Lori.]
Brian! Brian! [Lori Screams.]
No! It's blood! [Panting.]
Oh, God.
The noises are getting closer.
- I've lost Lori, and Brian's disappeared.
- [Chopping Sounds Continue.]
[Sobbing.]
Oh, God.
It's her.
I can hear her.
She's here.
She's here! Oh, God, she's here! Lori, where the hell are you? Lori! Oh, my God.
Help! Help me! Oh, God! Oh, God! Somebody help me! Somebody help me, please! [Screaming.]
[Zack.]
I just keep hearing the screams.
- I've never heard screams like that, Dr.
Brennan.
- Neither have I.
Narrow focus trauma on the left humerus, posterior side.
- Indicates an attempt by the victim to shield his head.
- From the ax attack.
What? It's always an ax, isn't it? - Remember The Shining? - My palms perspired profusely during that film.
Until we complete a series of blade comparison tests there's no way to know what type of weapon was used.
- Forensic team found this near the pit.
- Looks organic.
Definitely decomposing.
Victim's preliminary tox screen came back negative.
No drugs.
- That's too bad.
- Why? Because drugs would explain the writings I found inside Graham's backpack.
I'm cleaning them and taking mud samples, but I think Booth should show 'em to a profiler.
They're handwritten, scrawled.
And so far, all I can make out is "Maggie came to me again, calling me.
" And last but not least "They will scream for air, but their lungs will fill with blood.
" I'll redo the tox screen.
I may be alone in this, but I think one of us should remain a rational human being during this investigation.
Got it.
Comminuted fracture to the ulna.
Professionally set.
From the degree of callous formation, that's a childhood injury.
One that could give us the I.
D.
we want.
I'll call Booth, tell him to contact next of kin.
Zack, place some garlic around the remains and chant the Hmong ritual for preservation of souls.
Really? [Chuckles.]
This is going to be a long case.
[Man.]
Graham broke his arm sliding into second base.
Um, he was eight.
It's a match.
I'm very sorry.
Thanks.
Look.
I can't say that I'm surprised.
He, uh He was missing for a year.
But still, when you hear It was just us, you know? My parents died in a car accident.
I was 18 and he was 13, and, uh When something like that happens, when you lose your parents at that age it's just people don't understand how close you become.
I lost mine when I was 15.
It was just me and my brother too.
And he was 19.
Sorry.
Did Graham live with relatives, or did he go into foster care? God, no.
I would never let him go into the system.
I, uh I dropped out of college.
I joined the fire department to support him.
Your brother didn't It was a difficult situation for him.
I understand.
I mean, you know, it seems like you turned out okay though.
Do you know who Graham was with the night he disappeared? Yeah.
A couple of film students from school.
There was a guy and a girl.
I tried to get the guy Brian, his name was to help with the search.
But he was too freaked to go back into the woods.
I've never seen someone so scared.
So you were involved with the search? I've led a lot of search-and-rescue operations as a firefighter.
Um I should've found him.
- It's not your fault.
- I should've locked him in his damn room.
I mean, everyone knows weird things happen in those woods.
The chatter marks mean the vertebrae weren't split in one blow.
Makes sense.
Hacking off someone's head's more like cutting down a small tree than splitting a log.
I find your imagery both colorful and accurate.
Thank you.
Let me know when you've narrowed down the weapon category.
Dr.
Saroyan? When you say your mother visited you She appeared in my room.
It was early evening.
- And you were frightened? - No.
I felt loved.
- Dr.
Brennan says that's impossible.
- What do you think? I think it would be wonderful if it were possible.
I found rust flakes on the neck that were from hand-forged iron.
- 18th century.
- You got it.
- [Grunts.]
- My God! A little warning, Zack.
I don't usually announce each phase of my experiments.
- Yeah, maybe you should start.
- Nice follow-through, dude.
It doesn't look like it was a machete.
Dibs on the next weapon.
- Looks like you have this under control.
- [Hodgins Grunts Loudly.]
Graham had a fellowship at the school.
It was a free ride worth about 30 grand a year.
Brian, the other kid from the woods, he applied for it and lost out to Graham.
After Graham disappeared, the fellowship went to Brian.
Hmm? Did you hear me? Yeah.
Doesn't look good for Brian Andrews.
You okay? I I wonder what my life would've been like if Russ had raised me.
Well, you know, since he was a petty thief you know, in and out of jail all the time, I I imagine it wouldn't have been very good.
If he'd accepted responsibility for raising me [Exhales Deeply.]
I'm romanticizing.
It's foolish.
Everyone does it, Bones, okay? It's normal.
It's a useless fantasy, no different than the childish legend about the headless woman.
I mean, look at Will.
He sacrificed everything for his brother and still couldn't save him.
By walking out, maybe Russ gave me my life.
Well, you know, what Will said, he was right.
You turned out okay.
- I'm going to have coffee with him.
- Mmm.
- That was quick.
- He understands something no one else I know does.
I mean, people need connection, Booth, even me.
Obviously, you have one with Cam.
- So - What? I thought you'd mention it.
I mean, isn't that what partners do? - Tell each other about their lives? - Wait a second.
- Look, Bones, I - Sorry.
I'm sorry.
I forgot how self-conscious you are talking about sex.
I am not I'm Graham was kind of the star at school, so we all wanted to work with him.
And he thought the legend was true? Said that Maggie Cinders was talking to him in his dreams.
She told him where her head was buried.
And you believed him too? Not at first.
When we were out there in the woods Stuff like that doesn't happen.
What kind of stuff? Chopping sounds.
There There was eyes hanging on all the trees.
Something was moving out there that wasn't us.
Look, I know what you're thinking.
But you weren't out there.
Okay, Lori, she freaked.
She took off into nowhere.
And that's when we all got separated.
Okay, look.
The police report said that you brought Lori out of the woods.
When I found Lori, she was just curled up on the ground shaking.
So you took her out of the woods, but you left Graham? I thought he had left us, okay? You don't get it what it was like out there.
His brother asked you to go on the search with him, but you didn't go.
Why didn't you go? I'm not proud of myself, okay? But I just couldn't go back out there.
I couldn't.
Uh, Lori seemed to have disappeared from school.
You wouldn't happen to know where we can find her? I haven't seen her since that night.
The last I heard, she checked back into the psych ward.
I checked back in because I couldn't sleep.
I haven't slept for days.
Thanks for meeting with me, Lori.
Sure.
There's not much else to do in here.
Hey, do you mind if I ask you what happened that night in the woods? I've told the police everything.
But Graham is the only one that can make things right.
He just got a little lost in there.
But when he gets back, he's gonna make sure that I'm safe again.
Graham He promised to take care of you? Well, sure.
He's my boyfriend.
He doesn't want anything to happen to me.
Your boyfriend? We keep it a secret.
Other girls get jealous.
Everyone loves Graham.
Did Did you go into the woods? - Is that why you're here? - Yeah.
You found Graham? He said he was gonna talk to Maggie.
Is that where you found him? He wasn't with Maggie.
No.
N-N-No, no, no, no, no, no.
- Lori? Lori, just calm down.
- She killed him.
I'm sorry, Lori, but we need to know what happened.
- That's what happened! - We need to know what happened to him.
Did she take his head? Oh, God! No! The blood! - I called for help, but Brian wasn't there! - Relax.
Relax Relax, Lori.
You're safe here.
There was so much blood! [Sobbing Hysterically.]
I tried to run! Graham! Graham, she's coming! Run! Graham! Graham! She freaked, Bones.
It was like she was out there in the woods with that witch.
Don't let anyone else hear you talking like that, Booth.
I'm just saying, you know, I've seen a lot of weird things.
It was like, you know, Exorcist weird or Elm Street weird.
- What are you talking about now? - They're movies.
Okay, Bones? - Movies so scary that you end up peeing your pants.
- Good to know.
I noticed some damage to the subdeltoid bursa.
Looks like the subscapularis was torn away.
They're fracture lines.
This was a postmortem trauma.
Meaning what? The victim's shoulder was dislocated just after his death.
The injury doesn't fit into our established scenario of the struggle.
These marks near the vertebrocostal junction there's massive hinge fracturing.
Zack, lie down on the ground.
- Faceup or facedown? - Faceup.
- This should be good.
- And give me your right arm.
Okay.
If Graham Hastings was dragged to the pit by this arm in this direction the trauma to the back of his ribs would result in hinging.
And the exposed wound where the head was severed would've been collecting particulates along the way.
Tell Hodgins we might have enough for him to determine where the victim was beheaded.
Oh, yeah! Double yeah.
I'm waiting to hear from the psych ward to see if we can talk to Lori again.
Well, I'll ask Will what type of relationship Graham and Lori really had when I have coffee with him.
Wait a second.
You know, we're investigating his brother's death.
Don't you think that can get a little messy? I can compartmentalize same as you.
Mm-hmm.
The blood on those talisman things hanging from the treesnot human.
I'll be back soon.
I just wanna thank you for everything you're doing to find out what happened to Graham.
Is that why you called to thank me for doing my job? That and, uh I didn't think you'd come, so I guess I'm a little nervous.
Caffeine affects the adenosine receptors in the brain.
- It causes increased heart rate, so - There are other causes.
My partner warned me to stay focused on the case, so - If you got questions, that's cool.
- Okay, um What kind of music do you like? That's a good question.
Um Snow Patrol.
And Leonard Cohen.
I like Leonard Cohen.
Gravel voice, but somehow it's soothing.
Yeah.
I wonder why that is.
There's actually no empirical way of assessing something like that.
- But you didn't mean that literally, did you? - Uh-uh.
[Sighs.]
I'm sorry.
My My social skills are very limited.
Trust me, they're fine.
You know, it it took a long time for me to understand how my brother could leave.
And now, it's just as odd to meet someone who stayed.
I thought about leaving all the time.
I mean, I was a kid.
I didn't know how to be a parent.
I mean, I guess it was my fault that his head got so big.
He was bossing people around like he was already Steven Spielberg.
Well, Graham couldn't have been all bad.
- I mean, my partner says that Lori seemed to love him.
- Poor kid.
I liked her.
She deserved better.
- Graham didn't treat her well? - No.
He juggled a lot of girls.
I don't know how he did it - but no one ever found out about each other.
- So he cheated on her? Doesn't run in the family, by the way.
I have to get back to work.
- Did I say something? - Maybe.
If I offended you in any way, I'm sorry.
Do you like Massive Attack? [Chuckles.]
I don't know Massive Attack.
Very impressive integration of radical politics into their music.
I'll play 'em for you next time.
# [Rock, Indistinct.]
[Screams.]
I know where Graham Hastings was murdered.
- # [Clicks Off.]
- Are you trying to kill me? What's with the music? It helps muffle the screams so I don't pass out every few seconds.
Smart.
We have to go through all the video again.
Hastings was killed in a patch of eastern hemlocks like this.
They grow in clusters throughout the forest.
We have to spot the cluster Graham and the others were near.
Wait, wait.
We have to go through all the video again? Don't worry.
I'm right here for you.
[Graham.]
There is no way that this is natural.
I mean, it's like it's like she left this here to guide us or something.
Make it stop! Make it Make it stop! [Brian.]
Graham, there's something seriously wrong with Lori, okay? - We should go back.
- No! This is [Screaming.]
- No! No! - [Brian.]
What is it? Graham! - [Lori.]
Make it go away! - [Voices Overlapping.]
- Come on! Let's go! - [Lori Sobbing.]
Graham, get back here! - No, Graham! - What are you doing? Let's get out ofhere! [Lori Screams.]
Lori was not Graham's only girlfriend.
He had lots of girlfriends.
But he somehow managed to keep them secret from each other.
- So what would happen if a very jealous Lori found out? - I don't know.
- That's That's more your territory.
- What? What, about cheating? I just meant that you use psychology.
You're very touchy.
- Perhaps because of all your skulking around? - I am discreet.
Okay? It's different.
A gentleman is discreet.
Okay? - [Zack.]
What are we talking about? - Nothing that concerns you.
- Booth.
- But I'm quite literally in the middle of the conversation.
And it seems very interesting.
However, your glaring indicates that I shouldn't press for further information.
Mm-hmm.
Good genius.
Yeah.
So, Lori loves Graham.
Thinks he loves her but finds out that he doesn't.
So she goes all O.
J.
on him.
It's a perfect cover, right? "Headless witch did it, not me.
" The whole insanity thing might be an act.
But the victim sustained extensive defensive wounds.
This was a very powerful attacker.
When a woman finds out that a man has been cheating on her, she can get pretty mad.
That's what I heard.
Okay, look, we got motive and opportunity.
It fits.
No, it doesn't fit.
Graham Hastings was 5'10" and 176 pounds.
Lori is 120 tops.
The injuries aren't consistent with a woman Lori Mueller's size.
Of course, people on P.
C.
P.
have been known to exhibit extraordinary strength.
P.
C.
P? Who was on P.
C.
P? Hodgins' report on the organic matter from the baggie found at the scene showed that it contained psilocybin mushrooms injected with phencyclidine.
Whoa.
What a trip.
Well, if Lori ingested those, it's possible she could've caused Graham's injuries.
Not to mention combining dissociative anesthetics with hallucinogenic compounds.
It can have a devastating affect on people with fragile brain chemistry.
So her mental condition is probably genuine.
I'm gonna go talk to my buddy Brian and see if he knows anything about the magical mystery tour that Lori might've been on that night.
- If I could clear the forest - Then what? [Booth.]
Hey, Brian.
Hey, Agent Booth.
This is Nate Gibbons, my film teacher.
This is Agent Booth.
I told you about him.
Hello.
Hi.
- You're here about Graham Hastings? - Yeah.
Was he one of your students? Yes.
He was, uh, an incredibly gifted kid.
What happened out there was horrible.
- Mmm.
- What are you doing here again? - You wanna find out what happened to Graham, don't you? - Of course.
Yeah.
So what were we watching? - That's pretty cool.
- Nothing, really.
It's this film I'm doing for, uh, my degree.
Brian's being modest.
He wrote and directed an amazing modern take on the Gilgamesh story.
Nate produced it.
I got it accepted into Sundance.
Oh.
Congratulations.
If you don't mind, I'd like to talk to Brian alone.
Sure.
We'll finish up later.
All right.
- Call me if you need anything.
- Mm-hmm.
Brian, listen, we have evidence suggesting that Lori was taking drugs that night in the woods.
No.
Those woods are too thick.
We knew that we had to keep our heads on straight.
So as far as you know, Lori Mueller wasn't under the influence of any hallucinogens? - No.
- When she was with Graham, was she violent? - No way.
- Did you know that Graham was cheating on her? Man, that was none of my business.
Sure, Graham was a hound, and everyone knew it.
Maybe Lori found out, got angry with Graham.
No, okay? There's no way.
It wasn't her, okay? Whacked out or not, it wasn't her.
There was something else out there that night.
[Lori.]
Where are we going? I can't see.
[Brian.]
Don't worry.
Just stay close.
What is that? We're supposed to be looking for eastern hemlock.
It's much more effective with your eyes open.
I just know what's gonna happen here, okay? This is where they freak out because they hear the witch.
[Lori Screams.]
Wait.
There.
Did you see that? Yeah.
But where are they? Go Go forward.
Stop.
Dense crown, fine branches, scaly bark and wide ridges.
Those are eastern hemlocks.
Love your eyes.
Now we need a landmark.
You have to be quiet, okay? There's something out there.
No! No! Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
[Speaking Backwards.]
[Hodgins.]
2:37 a.
m.
- So? - We have a date plus an exact time.
I can estimate the position of the moon from shadowing patterns on the forest floor.
We should be able to get the approximate latitude and longitude.
- Yes.
- [Brian.]
Graham, leave the camera! - [Graham.]
What about Lori? - [Lori Screams.]
Let's just work out the coordinates.
- Yeah.
- [Lori Screams.]
Graham? Graham? The ax was found buried over there.
Dried blood on the trunk.
Whoa.
Make that a lot of dried blood on the trunk.
Someone should do a scraping here.
Where did you find the skull? Buried just beyond those bushes.
But there's something else.
[Booth.]
A second skull.
- [Edison.]
I'm afraid so.
- Are there any other outstanding cases in the area? No, there aren't.
Well, based on bony architecture this skull's consistent with that of Graham Hastings.
[Saroyan.]
I'll confirm with the blood from the ax.
- And the other skull? - Female.
Mid-30s at the time of death.
Which was between the mid-18th and mid-19th centuries.
You know, this ax handle is birch.
Betula uber.
Same extinct species as the wood fragments we found in the bone.
I'm almost done with her face.
Why are you spending time on that? It won't help the case.
Come on.
Let the kids have some fun, Mom.
Both skulls have depressed fractures on the parietal bones.
They could've been killed with a blow to the head before they were decapitated.
[Brennan.]
In Graham's case, yes.
But on the female skull, there's evidence of new growth.
What looks like This person underwent trepanation.
An antiquated form of brain surgery.
Practiced in the 1700s on those suspected of witchcraft.
- Do you think that skull is your Maggie Cinders? - [Hodgins.]
Of course not.
I mean, there's no way to know, right? I'm just saying it's interesting.
Hey, Bones, you know those papers that Hodgins found in Graham Hastings's backpack? - His hallucinogenic ramblings? - Mm-hmm.
You got it.
They were written on the back of pages from his screenplay.
I don't see the significance.
Graham was a film student.
Of course he wrote screenplays.
Yeah, but this was a modern day take on the Gilgamesh story.
The same story that Brian Andrews is using for his film.
He stole Graham's screenplay.
Yeah.
Look familiar? What Where'd you find these? Graham Hastings's backpack near his murdered body.
Care to explain why a movie that's about to make it to Sundance sounds a lot like the screenplay that your dead buddy wrote? - Look, I know what you're thinking.
- Oh, really? - Because what I think is that you killed him.
- No.
I think you're the one who drugged Lori so she wouldn't know - what the hell was going on that night.
- No, I didn't.
Look, I know that this may look similar, but this is mine.
Really? Because, you know, we found an e-mail on Graham's computer sending you a complete first version draft to you.
- He wanted you to read it, get your thoughts.
- So, what'd you think? I thought I thought that it was better than anything I could ever write.
So yeah, you know, after Graham was missing a few months Nate thought it would be safe to pass off as our own.
But I didn't kill Graham.
Anything else you forget to mention, Brian? Oh, come on, Brian.
You love the movies, right? So this is the time where the innocent guy comes clean or the guilty guy asks for a lawyer.
Okay, so which movie is this gonna be? That night Lori When When I found her, she was covered in blood.
It wasn't hers.
I was afraid.
- You think she killed Graham? - It wasn't her fault though.
She was nuts, okay? She said that the blood just rained down on her.
I wanted to protect her.
So you got rid of the bloody clothing? I hid them in the woods.
They're still out there.
- Okay, great.
You can take us there.
- No! Look, I'll tell you what I remember but I'm never going out there again.
You can lock me up for the rest of my life.
I'm never going back out there.
The kid said he hid her clothes in a hollow log near a stream.
Thanks.
Angela looked at the video again.
Tell the forensic team to fan out across the area south-southwest of the cabin ruins.
Did you hear that, Lou? Yeah, south-southwest.
Yeah, I know it gets cold when the sun goes down, Lou.
Well, you should've brought your blankie.
Just call me when you find her clothes.
Man! [Sighs.]
What? - He was being a baby.
- I didn't say anything.
But you're looking at me like I'm in trouble and you're a teacher.
- You're very touchy lately, Booth.
- Look, Bones.
I don't know why I didn't tell you about Cam.
- Did I mention Cam? - I just didn't want it to get weird, I guess.
Weird? We're partners, you know? Together all the time, right? You're a woman, and I'm a man.
And I never had a relationship like this where we were like two guys, except you're not, you know, a guy.
- Yeah.
- No.
No, I'm not.
Should I feel odd about wanting to hang out with Will? No, of course not.
You know? Because essentially, I mean, you're a guy like me, but not really.
That would mean that to me, you are essentially a woman.
- Yeah, I can see that.
- No, no, no, no.
I'd prefer not to be a woman if you don't mind.
- I'm merely trying to follow your reasoning.
- [Cell Phone Ringing.]
Okay, fine.
What do you say we just, you know We'll drop it for now.
Yeah, it's Booth.
They found the clothes.
- That was fast.
- Well, good work, Lou.
All right, now you can come home before all the monsters get you Hmm.
Hung up on me.
I thought it was funny.
The blood from the ax was from Graham Hastings.
Okay, was the blood on Lori Mueller's clothes a match? - Nope.
- Then there's another victim out there? Yes, and she's probably named Bessie.
- Bessie? - It's cows' blood.
The hormones and antibiotics affirm that it's from a butcher shop.
Dr.
Brennan, the witch's skull was cut with a Stryker saw.
Wait.
Don't you use those in your autopsies? They're also used in teaching institutions.
I found a faded serial number behind the occipital condyle.
It's from the university.
So the skull was stolen from the medical school.
Someone set up one hell of a horror show to kill Graham Hastings.
- Have a seat.
- I'll help in any way I can but I do have a class starting in 45 minutes.
Yeah, well, you know, it's film class.
Have 'em watch Wedding Crashers.
I can assure you, Agent Booth, that film class is a lot more than watching movies.
Were you aware that the medical school at the university has an anatomical specimen collection? I don't even know what that means.
This is about Graham, right? The research collection can only be accessed by a faculty member with a key card.
Yours was recorded entering the building last November 7 th three days before Graham Hastings disappeared.
You often go into a medical school at 2:43 in the morning? I reported my card missing last November.
You'll find a record of that.
Yeah.
It's convenient.
- Very convenient.
- Are you accusing me of something? Someone stole a skull, planted it in the woods along with animal bones, blood, weird amulets.
Tricking people into believing that Graham was murdered by a ghost.
Okay, but why? Why would I possibly want to do something like that? - Ride his coattails, you know? Escape the faculty ghetto.
- He shut you out.
And maybe you were feeling just a little bitter about that, huh, teach? I'm entitled to an attorney, aren't I? Okay, maybe it was Graham who stole the skull himself.
Are you suggesting that it was some convoluted suicide scheme? - He chopped off his own head? - No.
Look, I'm just saying things, they got out of hand, right? He wanted to make it look like a documentary, right? As scary as possible.
So he sets everything up, right? He gets Nate to help him out that night.
But Nate sees an opportunity.
No one knows he's out there.
And before you know, it's chop-chop, and "I'm going to Hollywood.
" I found someone else in the woods.
I think it's a person.
Have you finished with the particulates from the ax handle? I've determined that the assailant was wearing rough-hewn leather gloves.
- But I still have to check.
- Then why are you in here? Because I want him here.
Okay, look.
I ran it through a mass-recognition program.
That's Graham, and that is our mystery guest.
- It's not Brian? - No.
Different height and weight.
This person is about 6'1 ".
As you can see, that includes a head.
So it's definitely not Maggie.
Nate Gibbons is about 6'1 ".
I'll ask Will ifhe can tell us anything about Graham and his teacher.
Maybe he threatened Graham.
[Lori Screaming.]
His professor? Did Graham tell you anything about his relationship with him? He said the guy wanted to help produce his film.
Graham said he wanted to do it on his own.
His professor is producing his film.
Brian stole Graham's screenplay.
He and the professor are making it.
The teacher killed Graham for a script? It would make his career.
Brian's too.
I've seen people murdered for a lot less.
It's not certain yet.
We're just looking for evidence that links one or two of them to the remains.
With all this going on, when I'm with you I feel like everything's gonna be okay.
I'd like to see the world the way you do.
Then you would be looking at a very beautiful woman.
[Saroyan.]
Preliminary tests show only one type of D.
N.
A.
on the ax.
But now the follow-up tests are showing two.
- Something wrong with our electrophoresis machine? - No, I double-checked it.
So this means you got the killer's D.
N.
A.
Right.
The attacker must've been cut by Graham during the struggle.
I'm trying to separate out the two types of D.
N.
A.
, but it's hard.
It's easy.
I'll just get a warrant for a blood sample for Nate Gibbons.
The glove fragments on the handle were coated with diammonium phosphate and a guar gum-derivative thickener.
- Do you speak English? - It's a flame retardant.
Exactly.
Isn't that only used by professional firefighters? Wait.
Graham's brother is a firefighter.
He's also about 6'1 ", right? And he has a head.
That explains why it looks like there was only one blood source.
Siblings share so many of the same chromosomes.
Will Hastings killed his brother.
- That certainly explains my results.
- Brennan.
Wait.
She's with him now.
[Siren Wailing.]
- Good and funny.
- That's your opinion.
I don't think you're the one that should be telling me what Booth.
What are you doing here? I'm sorry.
- You're under arrest for the murder of your brother.
- Wait.
What? - You have the right to remain silent.
- What is this, Booth? He did it.
Cam found his blood on the ax and Hodgins found chemicals that only a firefighter would have access to.
I didn't kill Graham.
We fought.
That's all.
You were out there in the woods that night? Please don't look at me like that.
Please? I was just helping my brother.
He said the film was gonna make him famous.
So you got the animal bones, the blood and you made the chopping sound with the ax.
He wanted me to stay out of sight.
But the girl Lori he slipped her drugs.
And she was screaming, and I said I wasn't gonna help anymore.
And I said I wouldn't throw the blood on her, so he did it.
And she went crazy, and you saw her.
Graham did that to her.
- Will - I had to stop him, okay? I can't be responsible for raising a monster like that.
- So you hit him with the ax.
- He was just lying there and I was waiting for him to move.
And I've never I've never even hit him before, no matter how difficult he got.
Then you chopped off his head and you buried him to make it look like some witch did it.
No.
She did it.
She did it.
Maggie Cinders was out there that night and she made me do it.
She told me never to tell anybody.
Maggie Cinders made me cut off his head.
That's the only way it could happen.
You know me.
He was my brother.
I could never kill my own brother.
It was her! What are you waiting for, Booth? - You have the right to remain silent.
- No! You understand me? - Anything you say - No, please.
- Wait, please.
- will be used against you in a court of law.
You have the right to speak to an attorney.
Yeah.
The F.
B.
I.
needs me to finish cataloguing the restored footage.
It's cool.
I don't have anywhere else to go.
You've been great today, Hodgins.
I know.
I haven't seen that piece.
[Angela.]
Yeah, I was working on it before.
It just finished rendering.
Uh Uh, it could could be a reflection.
- [Hodgins.]
Had to be.
Or some moonlight.
- Yeah.
Uh, moonlight sounds right.
Can I stay at your place tonight? Sure.
No problem.
# [Pop Ballad.]
[Sighs.]
I sure know how to pick 'em, don't I? Well, you know.
Our perceptions are always colored by what we hope and what we fear, what we love.
We do the best we can.
I'm afraid my best isn't good enough.
I can read bones, not people.
Well You know, you had no trouble seeing through me.
- It's a good thing I like being alone.
- You know what? You're not alone.
Okay? Come on.
- Booth.
- Hey.
You're my partner.
Okay? It's a guy hug.
Take it.
All right? # [Continues.]
# [Ends.]
What's that mean?
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