Who else has handled the various personalities and conflicts with aplomb like him? Bohannon as an unlikely middleweight boxer has toppled Durant and Mickey in previous seasons. The Swede’s thinly-veiled religious fervor is no match for Cullen’s cunning ways of getting the job done. Will the Swede soon be defrocked? If only he weren’t deaf to the slowly beating drums viewers have heard since he murdered the real bishop en route to Fort Smith. Father Hatch and the Swede deserve each other, perhaps for no other reason than they’re united in the murder of an innocent. They’re joined at the hip and oftentimes meet each other at the crossroads of misinformed religious dogma, hypocrisy and the lies that lull them to sleep at night. Meet your enemy where he rests and plays, and he won’t suspect you’re there to reveal his forked tongue, horns, and tail. Cullen took the Swede to a Southern-style tent revival, the smoke evaporated and the mirrors were no longer able to disguise his foul countenance. The snake was cornered, unable to wiggle away yet again as Cullen exits whistling Dixie on his way back to a new Cheyenne. We know Bohannon is a creature of habit. Watch out John Campbell. The provisional governor and his posse arrive in Cheyenne with the directive of establishing order in the heretofore lawless city. Durant hasn’t taken too kindly to having an overseer with bestowed power invading his backyard. I don’t foresee the provisional governor and his motley crew being of any good in Cheyenne, and especially to its people. John Campbell won’t stand a chance against the combined forces of Durant, Cullen, Mickey, and Eva. They’ve arrived with the wrong intent of alienating the locals, striking the fear of God, and thinking themselves superior. This might become their fatal flaw. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that’s your thing!