Originally aired: 18/01/2007
Writer: Matt Witten
Director: Charles Beeson
Guest Stars: Annie Wersching,
Matreya Fedor
Official CW Description
IMAGINARY FRIENDS AREN'T
ALWAYS IMAGINARY Sam and Dean investigate two strange
deaths at a small Connecticut inn run by a single mom
whose young daughter plays with an imaginary friend.
The brothers find evidence of voodoo around the inn,
but soon realize the little girl's imaginary friend
may in fact be a demon who is killing the townspeople.
Full Synopsis
The
Inn
A delivery truck pulls up to the Pierpont Inn. Inside,
a woman and a man are walking up the stairs, the woman
says “Most of the stuff is up here.” “I
still can’t believe they’re closing this
place,” says the man. “You know my parents
got engaged here. My grandparents, too.” “A
lot of people did,” she says. “The boxes
are at the end of the hall. Need any help?” He
says he’s fine and goes on by himself. Two little
girls are sitting at the top of the stairs, and one
says “He’s gonna take our toys?” “Only
the ones you don’t play with anymore,” her
mother says. “It’s not like you don’t
have enough already.” “Son of a bitch,”
says the other little girl sitting there. “Son
of a bitch,” copies the first, Tyler. “Watch
your mouth,” says her mother. “Maggie said
it first,” the Tyler quickly says. “Watch
your mouth, too, Maggie,” says the mother.
Tyler’s
room
Tyler goes into her room and over to a big dollhouse.
Her entire room has dolls in it. She puts one of the
dolls into a chair and then goes on to put more of them
into their beds, saying good night to them as she does.
Then she goes back and sees that the chair is now empty.
She looks around the house and then finds the doll lying
at the bottom of the stairs with its head twisted around.
She hears a scream outside her room.
Her mother is on the phone, talking
to someone urgently. The packing man is next to her
on the floor at the bottom of the stairs. He’s
dead, his head twisted around. There is a doll lying
next to him. Her mother tells her not to look, but she
stays anyway.
Motel
Peoria, Illinois. There are missing posters of Ava Wilson
on the walls of the motel. Sam is talking to Ellen on
his cellphone as Dean comes in. “Okay, thanks
Ellen,” says Sam, hanging up. Dean asks what she
had to say, and Sam replies nothing, and me, I’ve
been checking every database I can think of, Federal
state and local. Nobody’s heard anything about
Ava. She just… into thin air, you know. What about
you?” “No, same as before. Sorry man,”
replies Dean, handing him a coffee. “Ellen did
have one thing,” says Sam. “A hotel in Cornwall,
Connecticut. Two freak accidents in the past three weeks.”
“Yeah, what does that have to do with Ava?”
asks Dean, walking over to his bed. “It’s
a job,” Sam replies. “A lady drowned in
the bathttub, and then a few days ago, a guy falls down
the stairs, head turns a complete 180. Which isn’t
exactly normal, you know? Look, I don’t know,
Dean. It might be nothing. But I told Ellen we’d
think about checking it out.” “You did?”
Dean says, taking off his jacket and sittting down.
“You seem surprised,” says Sam. “Well
yeah it’s just, you know, it’s not the patent
Sam Winchester way, is it?” Dean answers. “What
way is that?” asks Sam. “I just figured
after Ava, there’d be – uh, more angst,
and uh, droopy music, and staring out the rainy windows…
yeah I’ll shut up now,” he finishes, seeing
Sam’s unamused look. “I’m the one
who told her to go back home,” says Sam, standing
up. “And now her fiance’s dead and some
demon has taken her off to God knows where, you know?
We’ve been looking for a month now, and we’ve
got nothing. So I’m not giving up on her, but
I’m not going to let other people die either.
We gotta save as many people as we can.” “Wow,”
says Dean. “That attitude is just way too healthy
for me. I’m officially uncomfortable now. Thank
you.” He looks at Sam for a minute, and then says
for him to call Ellen and tell her they’ll take
the job.
The
Inn
Sam and Dean are getting out of the car in front of
the inn. “Dude, this is sweet!” says Dean
enthusiastically. “We never get to work jobs like
this.” “Like what?” asks Sam. “Old
school haunted houses! Fog, secret passage ways…
sissy British accents…” Dean replies as
they head up to the door. “Hey, wait second,”
says Sam before Dean knocks. “I’m not so
sure haunted’s the problem.” “What
do you mean?” asks Dean. “See this pattern
here?” says Sam, pointing at a pattern on the
top of one of the urns. He says it’s a five-spot.
“Five-spot?” says Dean. “That’s
used for Hoodoo spellwork, isn’t it?” Sam
says yeah, if you fill it with bloodweed you have a
powerful charm to ward off enemies. Dean says he doesn’t
see any bloodweed. “Don’t you think this
place is a little too – uh – white-meat
for Hoodoo?” Sam shrugs. “Maybe.”
Inside
the Inn
Inside the woman, Susan, comes out and asks them if
she can help them. “Yeah, we’d like a room
for a couple of nights,” says Dean. Maggie and
Tyler come running out of a side door and accidentally
run into Sam. Susan apologizes, and Sam says it’s
no problem. “Well, congratulations,” says
Susan. “You could be some of our final guests.”
Dean chuckles a little and replies, “That sounds
vaguely ominous.” “No, I’m sorry,
I mean we’re closing at the end of the month,”
Susan corrects, then looks at them. “Let me guess.
You guys are here antiquing?” Dean blinks at her
for a second, but Sam nods and Dean asks her how she
knew. “Oh, you just look the type,” she
smiles. “So, uh, king sized bed?” Dean gapes
at her for a second before Sam speaks up and says, “Uh
no, no, two singles, we’re just brothers.”
“Oh,” she says. “I’m so sorry.”
“What’d you mean we looked the type?”
asks Dean, but Sam quickly cuts in and asks her about
the urn on the front porch, asking her where she got
it. She answers she doesn’t know, it’s been
there forever. She hands Dean the key, and asks Sherwin,
an older man in a suit, to show them to their rooms,
and he immediately smiles and says, “Let me guess
– antiquers?”
They walk up the stairs, Sherwin pulling
all their bags behind him. Dean asks if he wants some
help but he replies no. Sam comments about the hotel
closing, and Sherwin starts telling them about how it
used to look like a palace. He says two different vice
presidents were there, his parents worked there, and
he practically grew up there. He says he’s going
to miss it, and then unlocks their door for them. They
go in and when Dean turns to shut the door, Sherwin
is still standing there, his hand out. “You’re
not going to cheat out on me, are you boy?” Dean
sighs and reaches for his wallet.
The
boys’ room
Sam is looking at some papers as Dean is exploring the
room. “What the -,” he says, looking up
at a large dress hanging on the wall. “What?”
asks Sam. “That’s normal,” replies
Dean. “Why would anyone stay here? I’m surprised
they kept in business this long.” “Alright,
victim number one, Joan Edison, realtor, handling the
sale of the hotel, and victim number two was Larry Williams,
moving some stuff out to Goodwill.” “Well
there’s a connection, they’re both tied
up in shutting the place down,” Dean says. “Yeah,
maybe someone here doesn’t want to leave, and
they’re using Hoodoo to fight back,” says
Sam. Dean wonders if it’s Susan, but Sam says
it doesn’t seem likely as she’s selling
the place. “So what then, Sherwin?” asks
Dean. “I don’t know,” Sam replies.
“Of course the most troubling question is why
do these people assume we’re gay,” Dean
says. “Well you were kinda butch,” Sam says.
“Probably thought you were over-compensating.”
Dean smiles at him, “Right.”
The boys walk down the hall, and Sam
finds another urn with Hoodoo inside. Dean knocks on
the door nearest them and Susan answers it, then asks
them if everything’s okay with their room. They
both answer quickly that yes, it’s great. She
tells them that she was just in the middle of packing
and starts to close the door when Dean suddenly spots
something and says, “Hey, are those antique dolls?
‘Cause this one – this one here, he’s
got a major doll collection back home.” Sam gives
him a look, but Dean just says, “Don’t you,
huh?” Sam turns resignedly and says, “Big
time.” “Big time,” repeats Dean, smiling.
“Do you think he could – we could come in
a take a look?” “I don’t know,”
she says, but Dean quickly cuts in “Please? I
mean, he loves them. He’s not gonna tell you this,
but he’s always dressing them up in these little
tiny outfits and… you’d make his day. She
would, huh? Huh?” Sam glares at him but then turns
slowly to Susan and replies, “It’s true.”
“Okay,” she says. “Come on in.”
They go in and Dean looks at all the dolls, saying “Wow.
That’s a lot of dolls. They’re nice, I mean,
they’re not super creepy at all.” Susan
says she supposes they are a little creepy, but they’ve
been in the family forever and have a lot of sentimental
value. Sam meanwhile as at the big doll house, and asks
her what it is, the hotel? “That’s right,”
she says. “An exact replica, custom built.”
Sam notices the doll laying at the bottom of the stairs
and picks it up, then says, “His head got twisted
around. What happened?” “Tyler, probably,”
Susan answers. At that moment Tyler comes in and tells
her mother that Maggie’s being mean. “Tell
her I said to be nice, okay?” says her mother.
Sam comes over saying “Hey Tyler. I see you broke
your doll. Want me to fix it?” “I didn’t
break it,” she says. “I found it like that.”
Sam suggests that maybe Maggie did it, but Tyler says
firmly that neither of them did it, as Grandma would
get mad if they did. “Tyler, she wouldn’t
get mad,” says Susan, but Dean quickly says “Grandma?”
“Grandma Rose,” says Tyler. “These
are all her toys.” “Oh,” says Dean.
“Where’s Grandma Rose now?” “Up
in her room,” says Tyler as we are shown the silhouette
of an old woman sitting in a room with some light coming
in the window. Sam starts to say he’d love to
talk to her about her incredible doll collection, but
Susan quickly interrupts saying no. “I mean, I’m
afraid that’s impossible.” She tells them
that her mother’s been very sick and she’s
not taking any visitors.
Outside, Dean asks what Sam thinks
about the dolls, the Hoodoo, and the grandmother. “Well
dolls are used in all kinds of Hoodoo,” he says.
“Like curses, binding spells…” “I
think maybe we found our witch doctor,” says Dean.
They separate Sam is going to look at old obits and
Dean is going to see what he can find out about the
grandmother.
Front
desk
Susan is talking to a man who has come from the company
who bought the hotel, and she asks him what kind of
renovations they’re planning. He replies that
they’re going to demolish the hotel.
Tyler’s
room
Tyler is playing with her dolls and teaset. There is
a doll sitting on a bed in exactly the same position
as the actual man from the sales company is in his own
room. A door behind the doll starts to open, and at
the same time the same thing is happening with the man.
Tyler suddenly turns around and looks at the dollhouse
and sees that the doll is now hanging from its neck.
The same thing has happened to the sales man, he is
hanging from the fan in his room.
Outside
the hotel
Sam looks out the window and sees police and ambulances
taking the man away. Dean is outside and asks Susan
what happened. Susan replies that a maid went in to
change the sheets and he was just hanging there. “That’s
awful,” says Dean. “He was a guest?”
“He worked for the company that bought the place,”
she says. “I don’t understand.” “What?”
asks Dean. “We’re just getting a lot of
bad luck around here,” she says. “Look,
if you’d like to check out, I’ll give you
a full refund.” “No thanks,” replies
Dean. “I don’t scare that easy.”
The
boys’ room
Dean comes up and closes the door, then tells Sam, who
is sitting in a chair in the corner, that there’s
been another one, some guy just hung himself in his
room. “I saw,” Sam answers. “We gotta
figure this out, and fast,” Dean says. “What
did you find out about Granny?” “You’re
bossy,” Sam says. Dean looks at him. “What?”
Sam shrugs. “You’re bossy. And short.”
Then he laughs. “Are you drunk?” asks Dean.
“Yeah. So?” Sam replies. Dean looks around
and sees a bunch of empty glasses. “Stupid,”
Sam says behind him. “Dude, what are you thinking?
We’re working a case,” Dean says angrily.
“That guy who hung himself. I couldn’t save
him,” Sam says. “What’re you talking
about? You didn’t know, you couldn’t have
done anything,” Dean says. “That’s
an excuse, Dean,” Sam says. “I should’ve
found a way to save him. I should’ve saved Ava,
too.” “Well you can’t save everyone,
even you said that,” says Dean, but Sam hits the
table next to him, making Dean stop. “No, Dean,
you don’t understand, alright? The more people
I save, the more I can change.” “Change
what?” asks Dean. “My destiny, Dean!”
says Sam. “Alright, time for bed, come on, Sasquatch,”says
Dean, moving over and pulling Sam to his feet. “I
need you to watch out for me,” says Sam. “I
always do,” says Dean. “No, no no. You have
to watch out for me. And if I ever turn into something
I’m not… you have to kill me.” “Sam…”
begins Dean, but Sam stops him. “Dean, Dad told
you to do it, you have to.” “Yeah well Dad’s
an ass,” says Dean. “He never should’ve
said anything. I mean you don’t do that, you don’t
lay that kinda crap on your kids!” “No he
was right to say it!” says Sam. “Who knows
what I might become! Even now, everyone around me dies.”
“Well I’m not dying. And neither are you,
now come on.” Dean pushes Sam down onto his bed.
“No, Dean, you’re the only one who can do
it,” says Sam, holding on to Dean’s jacket
so he can’t move away. “Promise.”
“Don’t ask that of me,” says Dean
quietly, but Sam continues “Dean, please. You
have to promise me.” Dean looks at him for a moment
and then says “I promise,” reluctantly.
“Thanks,” says Sam. “Thank you.”
He starts to put his hand on Dean’s head but Dean
shoves him off and pushes him the rest of the way onto
the bed. Then he backs up and sits down.
Later he walks downstairs to the bar,
where Sherwin is. The older man asks him if he found
any good antiques, but Dean replies no, he got distracted.
Sherwin offers him a drink, and he takes it. “So,
poor guy, eh? Hung himself?” says Dean. “That
kind of thing seems to be going around lately,”
says Sherwin. “Yeah,” says Dean. “I
heard about the other ones. It’s almost like this
hotel is… cursed, or something.” Sherwin
replies that every old place has it’s spilled
blood, and if people only knew what’s gone on
in some of the rooms they check into… “You
know a lot about the place, don’t you?”
says Dean. “Down to the last nail,” Sherwin
replies. “I’d love to hear some stories,”
Dean says. “Boy, you should never say that to
an old man,” says Sherwin.
They are walking down a hall, Sherwin
is showing Dean some pictures. He talks about how the
hotel has been in the family for a century. Dean asks
about Rose and what’s wrong with her, but Sherwin
replies it’s not her business to say. Then he
shows Dean a picture of a little girl, Rose, sitting
in the lap of a dark-skinned woman. The woman has the
same symbol around her neck as the boys saw on the urns.
“Who’s that?” asks Dean. “That’s
her nanny, Marie,” replies Sherwin. “She
looked after Rose more than her own mother.”
The
boys room
The next morning, Sam is in the bathroom, leaning over
the toilet and groaning. Dean comes in and, grinning,
asks him how he’s feeling, then says he guesses
mixing drinks wasn’t such a gangbuster idea. “Hey,
I bet you don’t remember a thing from last night,
do ya?” he asks. “I can still taste the
tequila,” Sam groans, and Dean nods and then says,
“You know there’s a really great remedy
for a hangover, it’s a greasy pork sandwich served
up on a dirty ashtray.” “Oh I hate you,”
says Sam. “I know you do,” Dean smiles.
“Hey, it turns out when Grandma Rose was a tyke
she had a Cree old nanny who wore a Hoodoo necklace.”
“So you think she taught Rose Hoodoo?” asks
Sam. “Yes I do,” Dean replies. “Alright,”
says Sam, getting up. “I think it’s time
we talked to Rose, then.” “You need to brush
your teeth first,” says Dean, walking away.
They knock a the same door as before
and when no one answers, Sam picks the lock and they
go in. There is a door nearby the room with the dolls
and they go in. There’s a set of stairs and they
go up. They see the old woman sitting her chair. “Mrs.
Thompson?” says Sam. “Mrs. Thompson?”
There is no answer. He goes around to face her and says
they’re not here to hurt her. Then he stops. “Rose?”
She just sits there looking at him. Sam goes over to
Dean. “This woman’s had a stroke.”
“Yeah but Hoodoo’s hands on. You gotta mix
herbs and chant and build an altar.” “So
it’s not Rose. Maybe it’s not even Hoodoo.”
“Yeah, she could be faking,” says Dean.
“What do you want to do, poke her with a stick?”
says Sam. Dean nods. “Dude! You’re not going
to poke her with a stick!” says Sam. Suddenly
Susan comes in. She is angry and when they say they
just wanted to talk to Rose, Susan says that the old
woman is scared out of her wits. “I want you out
of my hotel in two minutes, or I’m calling the
cops,” she says, and they leave right away.
The
hotel
Tyler and Maggie are playing jacks on the floor when
her mother comes in and asks if they’ve started
packing yet. “No,” replies Tyler. “Why
not?” asks Susan. “I don’t want to
move,” says Tyler. “Yes, I know, but we
have to,” says her mother. “Maggie says
we’re not allowed to move,” says Tyler.
“Yeah,” says Maggie. “Tyler, enough,”
says Susan. “Maggie is imaginary. You are too
old to have an imaginary friend and I am done pretending.”
She walks away. “I don’t like her,”
says Maggie.
Susan
is carrying boxes out to the car. Sherwin is nearby
in his own car and says he can help her with the boxes,
but she says she’s got it and he leaves. Tyler
is playing up in the playroom when suddenly the swing
on the tiny swingset starts swinging. A wind picks up
outside where Susan is and she sees the swings swinging
by themselves. She walks over. Suddenly the seesaw starts
moving as well. The one up in the playroom is doing
the same thing. Outside, Susan’s car suddenly
starts up. It is sitting right behind her, facing her.
Susan reaches out her hand and stops the seesaw from
moving. More of the playground equipment starts moving
and as Susan backs up, she notices the car behind her
start moving. She starts to run and just as it is about
to hit her, Sam jumps out from the side and knocks her
aisde. She is fine, and they go inside.
“What the hell happened out there?”
she asks them. “You want to the truth?”
asks Dean. “Of course,” she replies. “Well
at first we thought it was some sort of Hoodoo curse.
But that out there? That was definitely a spirit.”
“You’re insane,” she says. “It’s
been said,” says Dean. “I’m sorry,
Susan. We don’t exactly have time to ease you
into this, but we need to know when your mother had
the stroke,” says Sam. “What does that have
to do with anything?” she asks. “Just answer
the question,” Sam answers. “About a month
ago,” she says. “When the killings began,”
says Sam. “See?” he says to Dean. “So
what if Rose was working Hoodoo, but not hurt anyone,
to protect them?” “She was using the five-spot
urns to ward off a spirit,” Dean says. “Right,
until she had a stroke and she couldn’t anymore,”
Sam finishes. “Oh, I don’t believe this,”
Susan says. “Listen, sister, that car didn’t
try to run you down by itself, okay,” says Dean.
“I mean, well I guess it did, technically, but
the spirit can… forget it.” “Just
believe what you want,” says Sam. “But the
fact is your family is in danger, so you need to get
everybody out of here. Your employees, your mother,
your daughters, everybody.” “Um,”
says Susan, “I only have one daughter.”
“One?” says Sam. “I thought Tyler
had a sister named Maggie,” says Dean. “Maggie’s
imaginary,” replies Susan. The boys exchange glances
and then Sam asks her, “Where’s Tyler?”
Rose’s
room
Maggie is standing in front of Rose, and she is saying
that Tyler’s going to stay with her, and there’s
nothing Rose can do about it. Tyler comes in and says
“Maggie, don’t! We’re not supposed
to bother Grandma.” “I know,” says
Maggie. “Let’s go play.” “Can
we have a teaparty?” asks Tyler. “We can
have lots of tea parties. Forever, and ever and ever.”
Tyler’s
room
Susan and the boys run into the room, Susan calling
Tyler’s name. Tons of the dolls are broken and
thrown around the room. “Oh my God,” says
Susan. She calls for her a bit longer, and then says
“She’s not here!” “Susan, tell
us what you know about Maggie,” says Sam. “Uh,
not much. Tyler’s been talking about her since
Mom got sick.” “Okay, did you ever know
anybody by that name?” asks Sam. “No!”
she says. “Think, think,” says Dean. “Somebody
who could have lived here, might have passed away…”
“Oh my God, my mum, my mum had a sister named
Margaret,” says Susan suddenly. “She barely
spoke about her.” “Did Margaret happen to
die here when she was a kid?” asks Sam. “She
drowned in the pool,” says Susan. They leave the
room, but there is a little doll that looks just like
Maggie watching them.
The
pool
Tyler and Maggie are standing on the very edge of the
swimming pool, looking down into it. It is half full,
and there is a cover on top of it. “I don’t
like it up here,” says Tyler. “I’m
scared.” “It’s okay,” says Maggie.
“All you have to do is jump.” “I can’t
swim,” says Tyler. “I know,” replies
Maggie, “but it won’t hurt. I promise. And
then we can be together. Forever. And no one will bother
us.” “Why don’t you just come with
me and Mommy?” asks Tyler. “Because I can’t
leave here. And you can’t leave me,” Maggie
says. “Please? I don’t want to be alone.”
Sam, Dean, and Susan are running towards
the pool. They come to it but the doors are closed and
the glass is too thick to break. The boys pound at the
door and Maggie suddenly hits Tyler’s hand so
she lets go and falls into the pool. Dean asks if there’s
another door, and Susan tells him around back. They
run, leaving Sam at the other dor. He can’t break
it so he starts breaking the glass with an urn that’s
neraby. Tyler finally manages to come to the surface
but Maggie pushes her back down and says, “It’ll
all be over soon.” Dean is trying to break down
the other door, but it won’t fall down. Suddenly
Maggie hears someone calling her name, and she disappears.
But Tyler isn’t moving. Sam finally breaks the
door and jumps into the pool. He gets Tyler and swims
to the edge of the pool just as Dean finally breaks
in the door and they run down. Sam puts Tyler on the
edge, but she doesn’t move. Then as they all watch
in horror she suddenly coughs and wakes up. Sam asks
her if she sees Maggie anywhere, but she replies that
she’s gone.
Rose’s
room
Maggie is standing in front of Rose. “You’d
really do that for me?” she says. “Yes.
If you did, I’d let them go. But I don’t
understand. You kept me away, for so long. I thought
you didn’t love me anymore.” Rose just looks
at her. “Okay,” says Maggie. “Little
sister.” She strokes Rose’s cheek.
Susan is going upstairs to get Rose.
Sam and Dean wait downstairs. “I don’t get
it, did Maggie just stop?” says Dean. “Seems
like it,” says Sam. “Well where the hell
did she go?” wonders Dean. Suddenly they hear
a scream from upstairs. They run up to see Rose lying
dead in her chair.
Outside
“Paramedics say it was another stroke,”
says Susan as they watch them taking away Rose’s
body. “You think Margaret could have had something
to do with it?” “We don’t know,”
says Dean. “But it’s possible,” says
Sam. “Susan, I’m sorry.” “You
have nothing to apologize for,” she says. “You’ve
given me everything.” Then she turns to Tyler,
who is coming out of the hotel. “You ready to
go, kiddo?” she asks, and Tyler nods. “So
Tyler you’re sure Maggie’s not around anymore,”
asks Dean. “I’m sure. I’d see her,”
replies Tyler. “Well I guess whatever’s
going on, it must be over,” says Dean. “You
two take care of yourselves, alright?” says Sam,
and then Susan hugs Sam. “Thank you. Both of you,”
she says, and then the two of them get into a taxi and
leave. Dean comments that he thinks Susan liked Sam,
and Sam replies “Yeah, that’s all she needs.”
“Well you saved the mom, you saved the girl. Not
a bad day,” says Dean. “Course you know
I could’ve saved her myself, but I didn’t
want you to feel useless.” Sam laughs. “Alright,
I appreciate it.” “It feels good, getting
back in the saddle, doesn’t it?” says Dean.
“Yeah,” says Sam. “Yeah it does. But
it doesn’t change what we talked about last night,
Dean.” “We talked about a lot of things
last night,” says Dean. “You know what I
mean,” says Sam. “You were wasted,”
says Dean. “But you weren’t,” replies
Sam. “And you promised.” The boys look at
each other for a bit, and then they get into the car.
Dean looks like he’s going to say something, but
then he doesn’t, and they drive away.
Inside
the hotel
We hear giggling, and up in Rose’s old room there
are two little girls playing now, Maggie and Rose.
Synopsis
by Deanandhisimpala (Meghan)
Episode Music
N/A
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