Warning: The following contains spoilers for Sunday Yellowstone. Continue at your own risk.
We knew from the beginning of Sunday Yellowstone dat Monica was wearing something. But what? She told Kayce she did volunteer work. “Washing in a car?” asked her husband, appreciating the fit of her tank top in such a way that it was a miracle he was not late for work. As it turned out, Monica had thrown herself into trouble as a girl, bait for Sila’s killer. She had not ‘broken down’ on the side of the road before he picked her up, took her to his private murder field and began to choke life out of her.
Fortunately, Monica was not so alone when she appeared. Mo blew out the man’s brains, and suddenly Rainwater and the authorities swung the stage (which was infested with more skeletons than you would find at Party City on Halloween). ‘People talk about making a difference,’ the boss told them, ‘but they do not, because they do not take risks. You risk everything. Today you have made a difference. Read on, and we & # 39; ll see the other big twists in ‘I Killed a Man Today’, from Beth’s Hail Mary play to the most timed instance of skinny dipping in the history of … well, getting naked!
‘IF you’re with the family, can you be the one person in it who’s F – KING talking to me?’ | Somewhere in the episode, Rip, Jimmy, and Tate accompany John as he shares his equivalent of “retail therapy”: horse shopping. When he was ready, he asked Rip to find a new home for the horse that bowed too hard for the bunkhouse boys, but not hard enough for the rodeo. “Can’t have killed him just because he does not want to be driven,” John said. “I do not want to be driven either.” Before he can leave Rip, he challenges his future sister-in-law to, for Pete’s sake, tell him that he and Beth are engaged. Why did no one ever tell him? John asked him. “People do not talk to you,” Rip acknowledged, “because they are afraid of letting you down.” Not sure if I would say “Aww” or “Ouch”. Maybe both?
Meanwhile, Beth’s attacks on Market Equities inspired every hedge fund manager in New York to begin to suspect Roarke’s firm. (Needless to say, s – t was thrown around his beautiful house.) Willa replied – as I think she does to everything – cool. They put a plan in place to start buying Schwartz & Meyer supplies. “We’ll make this break today,” she promised. And the issue at hand began to feel the pressure for sure. When Beth’s assistant brought her java, she shouted, “Do I look like an emergency cup of coffee?!?” and dismissed them on the spot. Desperately, Beth called in reinforcements: Angela, who in that nebulous way warned her, “I don’t take a knee, I take a bite.” Whatever Angela would do to help Beth, it could make her partners by next week. While Angela worked her magic, Beth told the media about the hostile takeover, irritating Willa as if under the impression. ‘After we fired this bitch,’ she grumbled. “I should hire her.”
‘I made a promise, and I would lose it then break it’ | When Kayce arrived at his office, he found it filled with farmers wanting to thank her “for protecting what is ours and risking your life to do so” – and Jamie, in fear of her gratitude. But that was not the reason he was there, of course. Market Equities had offered the Duttons half a billion dollars for their land, he explained – land that they would have to sell in another year or two anyway. So would Kayce please take the offer to Beth to take John? It could not be Jamie who delivered it; he knew that. “Beth poisoned me.” But if Kayce took the offer to Beth to take John … maybe he would listen to the reason. Recently, Kayce arrived at Beth’s office, interrupting a very bad day that ended with S&M stock market plummeting and Bob flew in, presumably to shoot her.
Later, Beth took the offer to her father and explained what would happen if they did not sell to Market Equities. Come hell as high water, they had lost the land. The only question was: would they get rich to give it up … or would they fight a loose battle to keep it? That last one, John said. He could not bring himself to sell. ‘Not an inch. No one. He was sure – wis! – there had to be another way. Elsewhere, Teeter decided to take a break from repairing the gate to sheep and went to drag Colby with her. At least. Errors. Ea. They were confronted by Wade and his son, who continued to whip Colby, and, unless I was mistaken, drowned him as they rode their horses around him in the lake! WTF is his flesh with John? Damn!
‘IT’S NO WONDER WHERE WE GO, HUH? We think exactly the same ‘ | Before Rainwater knew Kayce had kept his shooting party a secret from her, she yelled when he returned home that evening and said his day was like any other. “What goes through your mind when you lie to me?” she asked. He actually had a good answer. “I’m always in a position where I need to be killed or murdered,” he explained. ‘Hell, it’s my job now. I didn ‘t want you to think I’m a bad man, even if I think so. ‘And he didn’t really think so. “Every man I killed made the world safer,” he added. ‘That’s how I feel about the man I killed,’ she replied, finally admitting that it was not a car wash that had her blood spattered.
Finally, after finding a good home in a sanctuary for the horse that did not bend hard enough / bend too hard, Rip asked Lloyd to be his best man. Over a beer afterwards, the old feller surprised her: ‘You did something no one does, Rip. You have survived your past. Did he do that, though? Because Walker was playing at the bar where she was drunk was the antagonistic hand that Kayce said he would – but not – “bring to the train station.” “He must be dead,” Lloyd remarked. Indeed, he is. So, what do you think of “I Killed a Man Today”? Is Colby really a goner? Probably Walker’s toast, right? And how screwed would Monica have been if her attacker had stopped instead of her stranger? Yikes!