“Time of Death” was well-paced, well-written, superlatively acted, and, in short, the whole episode hummed along like a stunning like spaceship that I want to carry around in my pants. I. I’m not entirely sure what I mean by that? But I know it’s good, and I know I’m standing by it. This is a show that works best when there’s an immediate mission at hand. As such, the main gang’s ploy to draw out The Benefactor and reveal their identity (it’s totally Scott’s dad, right?) was a perfect A story-line as they come. With it, came the opportunity for some pretty stunning emotional development that the show has been in desperate in of this season. While ‘dead,’ his friends and enemies alike in a frenzy all around his non-remains, Scott dreams. Much like Lydia’s haunted, mod-inspired, Lynchian record room, the visual landscape of Scott’s dream was eerie, beautiful and disturbing. We watched as the holding drawer of the morgue turned into a metal tube from which Scott was ejected into Beacon Hills High. The dream repeated again and again, with only a few elements changing. He sees Liam, they speak, he touches on Scott’s fears about what he’s becoming, and then The Mute appears and kills Liam. By the end of the dream, The Mute had taught Scott how to hack Liam to death, and Scott liked it. Given Scott’s ambivalence about the ease with which his father straight up cold-cocked that guy last week, I think having suspicions about his dad is totally valid. Here’s hoping it’s a deliberate plot-based choice and not a “aaaaahhhh what do we do with Kira?!” move. Lydia’s story is unwinding in a beautiful way. Whatever clapping and squealing I had managed to suppress came to the surface when it became totally clear that her grandmother was also a Banshee. BANSHEE’S UNITE! 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!