Back at the Honey House, the gang has discovered that, in fact, the hive was not at all sabotaged. "Damn!" Emerson says, as they walk into the house-sized hive. "You know, suddenly the crazy cat lady don't seem so crazy anymore." You want the truth about the Terrifying Bee Man? Here it is: Yeah, Kentucky was sabotaging Woolsy's beehive, but she was doing it with and for Betty, who loved her like a sister. And she wasn't killing the bees, she was moving them back to the honey house. No way was Betty going to let Woolsy have her bees -- since he started heading up Betty's Bees, all Betty's Bees products contained sixty percent less honey, including the honey. So, Betty knows Woolsy probably killed Kentucky, but to prove it she'd have to admit stealing her hive away from the company, in which case she'd be in big trouble. Plus, she probably can't prove that Woolsy is the Terrifying Bee Man, unless they could somehow get his DNA off one of his bees. A HA! Chuck sees the way.












