Exciting as it all is to everyone, the chip on Atticus’ shoulder when it comes to his father can’t be ignored. He lashes out at Leti when she, in her own manner, tries to help him, and his concerns about what Tree said about Montrose cause him to be even more distant with his father than normal. Things come to yet another head when Montrose sheepishly admits that one of the reasons he’s able to help solve many of the lair’s puzzles as the trio scream, swim, and dash their way through Titus’ traps is that George gave him a copy of the Sons of Adam’s bylaws the same night that he died. But in the same way that Atticus didn’t tell Leti about Christina, Montrose refused to tell Atticus about the bylaws, and though Atticus can’t see it in the moment—he and Montrose are only proving true to what Leti said about the two of them being similarly stubborn to the point of ruin—his father was doing so in an attempt to protect both Atticus and Leti in the long run.

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“A History of Violence” closes out on a far more horrific note after all these adventurous escapades, as the trio of treasure seekers literally wade through murky waters beneath the museum. Inexplicably, Leti comes across the rotting corpses of some of her neighbors floating by, which makes no sense because they disappeared in Chicago, but the heroes are currently located in Massachusetts. Rather than ponder how that’s possible, the three of them trudge on and do end up finding the vault and unlocking it using Atticus’ blood, and what they discover inside is...strange.

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Along with Titus’ still intact papers is the petrified corpse of a person that begins to reanimate and grow youthful flesh the moment the three of them begin disturbing things within the vault. Once restored, the person—Yahima (Monique Candelaria)—explains that they were a two-spirit person trapped in the vault by Titus when he was alive because they were fluent in the language of Adam, a language that only Atticus can understand. When Yahima realized that Titus only wished to use the book to inflict pain on others, they refused to continue assisting him in deciphering the Book of Adam—leading to Titus killing their family and entrapping them in the vault for over a century. Though Yahima understands that Atticus is nothing like Titus despite being of his blood, they refuse to assist him in his own journey to understand the Book of Adam. But as he grabs the pages from the book all the same, the vault begins to collapse in on itself under the pressure of all the water bearing down on it.

Atticus hurriedly grabs Yahima, and he, Leti, and Montrose all book it for a nearby, mostly-flooded elevator they’re somehow certain will carry them up to safety. From here, “A History of Violence” gets the slightest bit confusing as the episode catches up with Hippolyta and Ruby, apparently making their way back to Chicago without Atticus and Leti. But after noticing that Diana is flipping through George’s atlas, Hippolyta comes to the conclusion that their trip to Boston wasn’t just to visit the museum, and hurriedly turns the car around intent on finding out what’s really going on. Elswhere, Atticus, Leti, Montrose, and Yahima are by themselves somewhere in a house recuperating from their adventure, and for the slightest moment, it seems as if everything’s looking up for Lovecraft Country’s heroes. Atticus figures that he, using his own magical gift of gab, can work with Yahima to slowly gain a better understanding of Titus’ pages from the Book of Adam, and as he explains this to Montrose, Montrose can’t help but be proud of his son for taking initiative towards protecting his family.

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That energy lingers in the scene as Atticus leaves the room and Montrose and Yahima are left to sit in silence for a moment, but it’s disrupted when Montrose makes the sudden move to slit Yahima’s throat with no warning, apologizing as he does for some reason. Whatever light Yahima could have shone onto the newly recovered pages from the Book of Adam is something Montrose desperately wanted to avoid. Difficult as it is to see, Lovecraft Country’s far from done throwing its characters in all sorts of wild, different directions—directions that make it difficult to know just who all you’re meant to be rooting for.

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