Narrator: “This is where it started and ended. In the top secret laboratory of world famed scientist Dr. John Bellow.”
Being conspicuously on top of a hill with a 300 foot tower on its roof, I’m not sure how top secret it is. But it is, at least, secure as there are fences and guards, and history has shown us that no one can cross that kind of border.
Security Chief Steve Conway enters and says he has finished his assignment here. He will be going on to set up similar security for Dr. Hayes. Dr. Bellow is sorry for “what I got Hayes into” and “all this blasted secrecy”. Conway says their work is more important than the H-Bomb. Bellow still wonders why Conway won’t allow Hayes and him to at least work together. I guess it’s like not letting the guys with the formula for Coke fly on the same plane, or the guys who invented New Coke being booked together on Malaysia Airlines 370.
Hmmmm, the telephone that should never ring rings. Washington had agreed to communicate only by courier, and no one else has the number. Conway picks it up. The caller asks if this is 727J [1] and Conway says it is. The caller asks to speak to Bellow, but says he would not know his name. What the heck — we cut to a guy recording the call on a reel-to-reel tape recorder. Where’s our security chief?
Conway hands Bellow the phone and runs to an adjoining room. Oh, the recording guy works there for Conway. Wait, that phone is never supposed to ring. WTF does this guy do all day? Anyhoo, excited at finally having a purpose, he traces the call. The caller asks if Bellow will be there in 30 minutes. He says yes, but Conway tells him he will have to leave for his own safety. The soldier traces the call to a hotel occupied by the government. The lab bursts into flames, killing Bellow.
The investigation begins at the hotel. The Communications Chief tells Colonel Davis that Conway came in at 4:30 and asked how to contact Bellow. The Chief gave him the phone number to the lab — wait, I thought no one had that number! Conway — at least according to four witnesses, it looked like Conway — made the call to Bellow then left the hotel.
Conway says Bellow was working on a new rocket propellant capable of inter-planetary travel. Davis says it is workable and could be finished in a few years. He orders Conway to fly to Dr. Hayes’ lab as he is “the 2nd most important man on this project.” Uh, they did hear about the 1st most important guy getting blowed up, didn’t they? Hayes gets a call similar to the one Bellows got, and he too is soon dead.
Dull story short, they figure out the scientists were fried by high frequency sound beams which makes the title of the episode a complete non-sequitur. They figure out how to reflect the beam back to the source and kill people who shot it. But were they people or aliens? How did they imitate Conway? Why did they call first?
Other Stuff:
- [1] What is 727J? Is this a secret code name? The Base designation? Is he confirming he dialed the correct phone number? I get the KLondike5-#### format, but why does this switch back to a letter at the end?
Ladies and Gentlemen, Johnny Cash . . .
Cash Bentley stumbles through the Riverview Country Club just as I suspect he has many times before. He says to his friend Jim, “The Hudson River is flowing backwards, From New York to Albany. Time’s flowing right along with it.” Save it for The New Yorker, pal! Oh, Mr. Cheever, sorry sir! [1]
The crowd enthusiastically creates make-shift hurdles out of chairs, tables, music stands, broomsticks, velvet ropes, etc. Clearly this is humiliating for Cash, but he does love the attention, and the opportunity to show he is still good at something he was once great at. Cash tells someone to get his gun from the car, by which I hope he means a starter’s pistol. Some boozehound fires the pistol; Cash does 2 impressive laps around the club and everyone cheers him. Then he slugs Jim. The guy who fired the pistol, hands it back to him, “Don’t forget your gun, Cash.” Christ, good timing, bub! Panting, sweaty, humiliated, drunk, angry, just decked a dude — this guy is a mass murder waiting to happen and you hand him a gun!
Back at casa de Bentley, Cash is still liquored up. He fires up the old projector to replay the best 53 seconds of his life (2nd best accord to Louise). He hands her the pistol and says, “I’m a hurdler, I’m going to hurdle. Now you fire.” He tells her he will say, “On your mark, get set, go” and she should fire. When she protests, he slugs her.

When Arthur gets to the train station, the cabbie tells him he dropped his keys, just as Ellen predicted. Then the conductor tries to give him room 102B just as Ellen predicted. He breaks the cycle by insisting on a different room. Minutes after settling in, the conductor says this room was actually booked and he will have to move to 102B. After some argument, he relinquishes the room to the woman who had booked it.
pulling the Emergency Stop, Arthur prevented the train from slamming into a stalled freighter. She says she is a nurse, but that doesn’t really explain the knife. She also asks how he knew to stop the train when it was clear that this sweaty maniac running through the halls really had no idea what he was doing.
This might be the worst opening I’ve ever seen to a TV episode. It begins with 83 seconds of Sharon Bannister typing. That’s it. There is no suspense, we can’t read what she is typing, she isn’t topless. It is just typing for 83 seconds. [1]
She hustles Mrs. Trask out, and the cycle begins again. She hears noises, then gets a call from her ex-husband Larry. She hears the door and tells Larry, “They’re coming in.” She picks up a fireplace poker and advances toward the noises. Again, this is so flatly staged that it creates zero suspense or tension. Of course, it turns out to be Larry playing a trick on her. As he enters the room, she calls him a bastard. He replies, “You used to call me biscuit” which is just cringe-inducing. Yada yada, he kills her, which in a good episode would have been one of the yadas.
Well, Mrs. Trask’s loser son Joey has a crush on Sharon, there is a bit over some missing keys, Sharon is maybe not as dead as suspected, Joey gets a gun and Larry finds some hedge-clippers. This plays out nicely, but is just so deadly dull that it is hard to care. As if to really punish the audience, the return of Mrs. Trask is literally in slow motion.
He is taken to the morgue and we get a good look at that wound. There is no exit, so Dr. Ian Michaels reaches in and pulls out a metal projectile the size of his thumb if he had a larger weiner. A tentacle pops out of the hole and flails about before retreating back into Jacob’s noggin. Even more shocking, Jacob gets up and walks out of the morgue.