Salem Recap S1E03: In Vain
Anne lies in
bed, John stokes her stomach as Cotton condemns Salem. Anne hears Mary’s words
about love and war, Cotton goes on, the two close in on her and John shushes
her. Anne awakes in the bright daylight. She washes her face, but her
reflection shows demonic eyes. May’s doll is making the poor girl crazy.
Tituba tells
Mary that she should pay Isaac more to take away those bodies, but Mary thinks
the spectacle is good, it’ll rip the people into a frenzy. Mary wants Cotton
out there doing more, like she brought him in for, but he does not see what
more he can do. While some are relieved with Bridget’s death, many think it
unfounded. Mary thinks that the panic level needs to be raised higher and
doesn’t trust Hale’s judgment since he has yet to find who broke up their
Sabbath.
John hears
Anne’s cries. Men have come to loot the orphanage, and only John’s threat of
violence stop them from succeeding. The panic that has been caused with the
midwife’s and Cory’s deaths is causing the city to fall apart. Anne asks John
to walk her home. She wants to know where they will lay Bridget to rest, and
John tells her that it is not a good place.
Hale pays
the seer another visit, and he points his finger to Isaac as the one who broke
up the Sabbath. Petrus tells Hale that there was another with him, but he could
not see who it was. Hale leaves in a huff, but looks like he should have been
more careful, John followed him. John scopes out the Seer’s home, and finds
little more than his grotesque taxidermy animals inside. One of the animals attacks
John, and he runs into Hale. John asks what the hell was that place, and Hale
tells him that it is Petrus’ home, an expert into rabid creatures. John thinks
he could be involved in the witchcraft, but Hale scoffs at the idea, and
caution’s John’s accusations.
George gags
himself, trying to relieve himself of his frog. Mary stops him, and coos to her
servant. She’s so disappointed in him, and tells him to stew in his own vomit
as a punishment. Isaac pays Mary a visit. He feels for the burden that is her
husband, and she feels sorrow for both of their situations. He had no clue what
his one night with Abby would have cost them, but he still wonders what it
would be like if he could see her again. Mary doesn’t paint him a lovely picture
of hope though. Isaac leaves her home, and is bagged and dragged away. He is
brought to the place he dumps the bodies, A handful of tar is shoved down his
throat, and rubbed on his chest. The pig headed man and the bodies ask what he
saw in the woods, and who was with him.
Hale wants
all of the tar removed, wants all traces of them removed. More so he wants
Isaac to be found guilty, to be named a witch. He has the man plant items on
him, and they plan to send him to be caught.
Cotton makes
love to Gloriana. She’s crying. If a woman like Bridget can be killed, she’s is
sure that a woman like herself could be accused and executed for the same
crime, she asks him if she was named a witch if he would have stpeed in to save
her. He is sure that Bridget was guilty, and he was just doing his job. Isaac
enters the whorehouse, and causes amock. He’s completely out of control. Cotton
gets cressed. Gloriana tries to reason with Isaac, but there is something wrong
with him. He’s singing and spinning women around. John tries to quiet him, and
Isaac tells him that they saw them in the woods. Hale calls for him to be
arrested, and Mary is quite upset that Hale did this without her consent. Mary
wants Rose, and wants her now.
John and
Cotton debate whether Isaac was bespelled or if he is a witch himself. John
reasons that there is no way that Isaac would risk himself and take them into
the woods if he was a witch. The physican thinks that Isaac is good and
touched. The magistrate is forced to wait until morning since Isaac is knocked
out.
Mary meets
with Rose. Rose warns her that the elders are split in their allegiance. Mary
is tired of the constant battle, and she does not believe her sacrifice was in
vain, her baby cannot have died for nothing. Rose knows that it could not have
been easy to see John again, and she tells her that its up to Mary to decide
what is in vain and what is not. She also warns that the Magister’s roots are
old, he has seen much and suffered greatly, and to not underestimate him. She
will back Mary, but only to a point. John catches up to Mary as she walks home,
he does not want to see Isaac hung. He goes to Mary about it, but when she
doesn’t rise to his defense, John knows that she is no longer the girl he knew.
He tells her that Isaac said nothing, and that Hale was foiled, hearing Hale’s
name, Mary throws her allegiance behind him.
Cotton does
not want to kill Isaac, fearing that he saw something in Isaac that was no
there. He thought Isaac was a good man, the kind that could help in the fight
to save Salem. Isaac sees a vision of Abby, she asks who was with him in the
woods. It’s Mary making him see the vision of Abby. She pleads with him that if
he loves her he will tell her, but Isaac cannot tell her. Cotton asks what he
cannot do as Isaac gives up John’s name. Mary falls atop her bed.
Mary pays
Hale an early morning visit. She gets right down to business. She tells him
that Isaac was alone in the woods, and that ends the persecution. Hale is
willing to close the case, and have it end in the hanging of the boy. Mary is
unwilling to sacrifice Isaac. Hale tells her that she is powerless to stop it,
and Mary loses her temper a bit. She greets Anne, and the Magister has
weaknesses of his own, he should be careful.
Cotton
questions Isaac about what was found in his pocket. Isaac maintains that the
pigman put them on him, because he saw them in the woods. Cotton questions him
deeper about the men, and Mary warns John that the Magister is coming for Isaac
and he must be stopped.
Hale finishes
his breakfast, and Anne knows what he’s doing. She tells him that she hates him
for what he’s doing. Anne and Mary agree on nothing, except that Isaac should
not be executed. Hale explains to her that everything he does is for the good
of this town. Hale stomps off, and even her mother agrees with her on this
matter. She goes on to tell her that as much as she hates Mary she should
consider a way to emulate Mary, to give her voice a proper place.
John asks
Cotton if he thinks that Isaac is guilty. He is unsure. John stands against
Hale, who has come for Isaac. Hale orders him to be taken, but John isn’t going
without a fight.
Mary prepares
another dark spell, and Tituba warns that Isaac is not worth this effort. Isaac
isn’t, she agrees, and Tituba knows it has something to do with John. Mary
reasons that its about putting the Magister in his place, to make him remember
who is the snake, and who is the mouse. Anne brushes her hair, and her creepy
dolls are a mess. One sits alone on the bed. Anne begins to experience some
stomach pains, and she falls to her floor, bleeding from her mouth.
John gets
manhandled by Hale’s men. Cotton opens his door, whispering to Isaac to help
him. Isaac flies out, and the men try to get Isaac back into his cell. Hale is
told of his daughter’s illness, and he runs to her. She is beyond the physician’s
help. Hale sees the doll upon her bed, and runs to Mary for help. Mary has
effectively taken the fight out of the dog for now, and he’s willing to let
Isaac go, or anything else to save her. Anne is fine in her bed, her malady
gone. Hale understands now that a parent will do anything to save their child,
and his wife wonders what he did to save theirs.
The fight
didn’t make John a better person, but it may have helped Cotton to see the
light. Hale tells the pair that they have concluded that Isaac was merely
drunk, and that they are no longer pursuing him as a witch. Cotton allows John
to deliver the good news. Isaac is a drunk, and he’s happy with the verdict. He’s
never had anyone fight for him, and he doesn’t know how to thank him really.
Cotton goes
to his whore and tells her the good news. With
Isaac getting off, it just goes to prove his theory that the innocent have
nothing to fear. Gloriana isn’t so sure. She dreams of leaving Salem, of having
a different life with Cotton, but her words fill Cotton with doubt.
Isaac brings
flowers to the brothel as an apology, no words are needed, but the gift is
accepted. John tells Mary that Isaac has been freed. She’s grateful for Isaac
she says, and warns him that they were fortunate today, but they may not be so
lucky in the future, that she may not be able to protect him. She returns home
to her knitting, and finds one of her needles missing. George has it upstairs,
and he stabs himself with it. Someone his trying to rid himself of a toad
problem.
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