Salem Recap S1E4: Survivors
Mercy’s
father tries to exorcise Mercy of the witch that possesses her. She trusts him
until he opens her shirt and slices into her belly. A snake crawls out of her
stomach and slithers out the door.
In the light
of day, a man rides into Salem. He’s come to collect a parcel from a ship, but
there are dead on the ship, but its been quarantined by Mary. Mary ponders if a
man would like to know his death is upon him. Like the blacksmith, who will
soon be accused. She muses that no one is smart enough or brave enough to stop
them. But she’s wrong, John is, and may.
John is
looking over his parents graves. He rebelled against them, wishing that they
were different, and now he wishes that there were more good people like them.
Anne listens to his musings, and takes her leave until he tells her that he is
glad to see that she is feeling better. She tells him of her fever dreams, and
her faith in her father’s goodness has diminished. Her father, Hale, interrupts
taking her away.
John shares
his theory with Cotton. He thinks that Hale has something to do with the
witches, but he has no proof yet. He plans to get proof though. Cotton finds
offense in someone trying to buy off his whore. He takes the newcomer in hand
and warns him off. John stops him, but there seems to be some recollection.
The children
sing a song of black plague. Mary and Tituba see Mercy walking about, and Mary
approaches her, thankful that she is up and about. Mercy falls into another
spell, and people around ask who the witch is. Mary cannot control her, and
Mercy collapses. Mercy is no longer theirs.
Mary meets
with the other witches of Salem, and tells them about Mercy. Rose is not happy
with her report. Hale wants their little leak taken care of, and he sees John
as a threat. Mary cannot stand up for him against her coven. She and Tituba
have some investigating to do.
Mary goes to
Cotton, telling him of her disappointment. She worries that he is not doing his
job. She makes him feel inadequate, telling him that she did not ask for him
when this whole witch business came about, and makes it clear he should not
disappoint her again.
Hale invites
John to a reception in his home. He makes it clear that his presence is not an
option. John excuses himself. He grabs the newcomer, Hook. They knew each other
from the war, and it does not sound like a pleasant acquaintance. He wishes to
meet Mary, and John warns him off. He threatens to tell a story of John that
John does not wish to be told. He wants the man gone and soon.
Mary puts
off George’s feeding until she returns from the reception. Geroge uses her
knitting needle to write a message with his blood. Hook stops Mary, wanting to
gain access to the ship holding his cargo. She asks if he would risk infection,
and he would. He even goes as far as to threaten to go to her husband, but Mary
makes it clear that she and her husband agree on everything.
Cotton goes
to see Mercy. He finds exorcism paraphernalia, and although it concerns him,
Mercy does show signs of improving. Even more, Cotton finds a cut on her
abdomen, but the Priest believes she has plenty of time to heal.
Mary arrives
at the reception. She is surprised to see Anne there, and moreso to see Anne
has a new necklace from her father, one that wards her against Mary. Cotton
comes with good news that Mercy is free from her possessor. He tells her that
it proves the witches are weakening. Mary asks how Mercy freed herself, and
Cotton admits that it looks like there had been an exorcism. Catholicism is no
better than Witches. Even when he succeeds he fails. Hale welcomes John as the
newest member of the Board of selectmen. John wonders what if the witches were
not the common people, but perhaps a member of the board. He hopes not, and promises
together they will end the scourge of the town.
Cotton is
stopped by Gloriana, and he has a busy schedule. Gloriana is thankful for his
help, for his feelings. Cotton brushes it off, claiming that he would have done
the same for everyone. In the house of the Lord, he cannot speak falsely.
Gloriana tries to seduce him, speaking of his sexual sermons. She asks what he
will do in the house of the lord, and he shows her no mercy, treating like a
whore and throwing coins at her.
Hook sneaks into
the Sibley house. He comes across George, and speaks of Mary’s beauty, but her
lack of understanding. He asks George if his illness has rendered his deaf and
dumb. George hands him his bloody note, and Hook takes it.
Hale admits
to John that he invited him into his home on false pretenses. He tells him that
he’s a concerned father. Hale tells John that though he told his daughter
otherwise, that she was spelled. That he think that they were coming after him.
He does not know who the witches are, but thinks that they are allies.
Mary isn’t
pleased to find Hook in her home. She asks if he knows what they do to thieves,
he does not. He knows what happens to witches, and brings out George’s note.
Mary isn’t not pleased with his accusations, but she seems to capitulate, tells
him that the guard will leave at midnight, and he can slip in them. He’s
pleased and leaves. Mary burns the note. She tells Tituba what Cotton told her
about Mercy, that the familiar is gone, cut from her stomach. Tituba will
follow Hook, she will take care of her, and Mary plans to go back after Mercy
promising her the moon for her service.
Rose isn’t
pleased to find that Hook knows John. She would have used another courier
otherwise. He tells her that they are not friends, and that he did not tell
Mary anything about her.
Mary visits
Mercy in the form of the hag, and convinces the girl to take the familiar back
inside her. Mercy does not want to be a vessel again, but the hag coaxes her,
offering her power. The snake slithers in , and Mercy swallows it down. She is
Mary’s once again.
Tituba goes
to John telling him that she comes because he and Mary have a common enemy. Tituba
tells him that Hook blackmailed Mary, and she fears that Hook will be Mary’s
ruin unless someone stopped Hook from robbing him.
Hook rows
out to the boat under the cover of night. Hook climbs aboard the ship, and
looks for the item he was paid to retrieve.
Hale
confronts Anne about her feelings for John. Anne plays coy, but Hale thinks
that it is his job to protect her from harm. Anne finds a man not falling over
himself refreshing, but Hale points out
that John and Mary have a sorrid history. Anne thinks it is nothing more than
history for them, and she doesn’t fear Mary. Stupid girl, she should fear Mary.
Hale invokes the “because I said so” Dad law, which isn’t going to stop her
exactly, though he wishes it would.
John
confronts Hook, he wishes him to put down the chest, but Hook has claim over
it, one not even Mary objects to. John tells him that he’s not there for that.
He and Hook had an agreement. They were never to lay eyes on each other again,
and now since they have John will kill him. John chokes the life out of Hook,
and dumps his body among the rest of the unmentionables. He returns to open the
chest that Hook took, and inside finds a box. Who plans to unleash the
cenobites? They’ll rip apart their souls!
Mary paces,
watching out her window when she spots John. She thinks that sleeplessness must
be an epidemic. She asks him if he remembers the last time they spoke in a
graveyard. He would return in a year, and she would breathlessly wait. They
were wishes, before they knew the real world she muses, before they knew what
they would do for survival. He wishes her sweet dreams. Mary finds Mercy in her
house, holding the snake. Mercy laughs manically, she knows who she is. But
Mercy isn’t there, she’s just a reflection, and that makes her threat no less
real.
0 comments: