Back at the Pie Hole, the team goes over the possibilities. Is Betty Bee, Ned wonders, a co-conspirator or just the straight-up killah? Chuck reminds everyone that Betty, surely angry about Kentucky replacing her as the face of the company, did have a motive for murder. "But," Ned says, "Kentucky was sabotaging Betty's Bees, trademark, which is own by Woolsy Nichols, so that gives Woolsy motive." Emerson says, though, that Woolsy is a businessman, more likely to set a swarm of lawyers on someone than a swarm of bees. "I know," Olive says, once again coming in from nowhere, this time with dirty plates from the restaurant. "They were lovers of the same sex persuasion, and the key is for their love nest." Ned shakes his head saying they've ruled out workplace romance. "I'll just cross that off my list then," Olive says, with slight bitterness, while Chuck moonily gazes at Ned, saying she has not ruled out workplace romance. Emerson can't resist twisting the knife in poor Olive. "Romance does give you motive," he says, with a pointed stare in her direction. "Somebody always lovin' somebody they shouldn't be lovin'." Olive scowls at him and turns to watch Chuck, who is dosing a new pie with "vanilla," she says, for her aunts. Oh, but Olive knows it's not vanilla -- that's yet another secret she's having to carry around. She knows Chuck has been jacking up the pies with anti-depressants, a fact that came crashing down on her when she herself accidentally overdosed one causing Lily to wig out, confess that she is Chuck's mother in front of Olive, and thus subsequently ban Olive from the aunt's house in order to keep the secret safe from Vivian. BREATH! I know these sentences are running on, but hell, I've already had to type it all out about 12 times! Don't we all GET IT already? Stop with the internal recapping, show, I beg of you!








