Angelique to Quentin: "There is always violence in love."
Now there's a scary peek into Angelique's psyche.
It seems she was so obsessed with the effects of her black spell that she failed to notice that Cyrus began talking about the premise of his experiment-- the one that was her idea to begin with-- right in front of her.
But for an example of total insanity, there's this conversation--
Cyrus: "Maybe your love for Maggie was that..."
Quentin (slams hand down): "CYRUS, I'M NOT GOING TO SEND FOR MAGGIE, SO DON'T YOU PURSUE IT ANY FURTHER!"
C: "Quentin, I'm not pursuing anything and there's no reason to fight me on it."
Q: "No, no, there's not. You think I should send for Maggie, don't you?"
C: "That decision has to be yours."
Q: "Yes, I suppose it does."
And what was up with the sound of church bells over the image of Collinwood?
Now he's planning never to let Yaeger out again, and to forget his experiments and be a doctor plain and simple, doing good works.
I was fascinated by that revelation... until I saw that the bottle Cyrus was holding contained the antidote. Wouldn't it have made more sense if he'd been contemplating all those things over the serum that would turn him into Yaeger?
I guess it's a good thing that The Hanging Man was inverted when Quentin laid it down, because otherwise he would have had to hang himself by his feet since that's the way the figure appears when the card is right side up.
It's unfortunate that this is Paula Laurence's last ep as Aunt Hannah because I think she made a significant contribution to the show in the short time they used her.
I absolutely love that her final moment consisted of her character storming off-stage in an awesome black cape with red satin lining.