![]() ![]() The only differences between the women are their ages – Muriel was in her forties, Amanda in her twenties – and their lifestyles. Both women had roses left by their bodies as well, and yet there were no signs of a break in or sexual assault, indicating the women must’ve known their killer somehow. As the team soon learns, she was stabbed to death in her home, and she’s the second woman in Chicago to be killed in such a manner within a few days’ time, too, the first being a woman named Amanda. The smoke wasn’t what killed Muriel, though. But the burning kitchen instantly becomes the least of his concerns when he finds Muriel. He runs to the oven to check and see what’s going on, and finds.a pack of cigarettes burning inside. ![]() And judging from the size of the flowers, and the way he’s immediately apologizing before he’s even seen her, he clearly messed up big time with something.Īny hopes for making up are quickly forgotten, however, when the man sees smoke billowing out from the kitchen, and the smoke alarm going nuts. Rossi got a visit from a familiar face, the story went in a direction I hadn’t initially predicted when I first heard what this part of the episode would be about, which was good, and it fit well alongside the case in question.Īs always, let’s get cracking discussing the episode.Ī man is coming home late one night, flowers in his hand, calling out to his wife Muriel. It was certainly one of the more interesting cases the team has handled this season.Īnd for those who like the personal storylines with the team, this episode also fit the bill in that regard. We got a case more along the lines of the sort the BAU typically deals with, and even better, the episode took what could’ve turned out to be a very predictable case and gave it a genuinely unexpected twist. Luckily, for those of you who have been longing for the show to just get back to more run-of-the-mill cases and storylines, this episode delivered on that front. I’ve been enjoying the odd departures, myself, but I know there’s others out there who no doubt felt differently. Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Storyīeen an interesting run of episodes lately for the show, hasn’t it? We had a small “higher up investigates the team” arc, complete with the team actually being split up for a brief time, and then that whole crazy situation was followed up by a typical quirky Gubler-directed episode involving creepy clowns. ![]()
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