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Psycho (1960)

by Joseph Stefano. Based on the novel by Robert Bloch.
Revised December 1, 1959.

More info about this movie on IMDb.com


FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY


FADE IN:

EXT. PHOENIX, ARIZONA - (DAY) - HELICOPTER SHOT

Above Midtown section of the city. It is early afternoon, a
hot mid-summer day. The city is sun-sunblanched white and
its drifted-up noises are muted in blanched their own echoes.
We fly low, heading in a downtown direction, passing over
traffic-clogged streets, parking lots, white business
buildings, neatly patterned residential districts. As we
approach downtown section, the character of the city begins
to change. It is darker and shabby with age and industry. We
see railroad tracks, smokestacks, wholesale fruit-and-
vegetable markets, old municipal buildings, empty lots.
vegetable The very geography seems to give us a climate of
nefariousness, of back-doorness, dark and shadowy. And secret.

We fly lower and faster now, as if seeking out a specific
location. A skinny, high old hotel comes into view. On its
exposed brick side great painted letters advertise "Transients-
Low Weekly Rates-Radio in Every Room." We pause long enough
to establish the shoddy character of this hotel. Its open,
curtainless windows, its silent resigned look so
characteristic of such hole-and-corner hotels. We move forward
with purposefulness and-toward a certain window. The sash is
raised as high as it can go, but the shade is pulled down to
three or four inches of the inside sill, as if the occupants
of the room within wanted privacy but needed air. We are
close now, so that only the lower half of the window frame
is in shot. No sounds come from within the room.

Suddenly, we tip downward, go to the narrow space between
shade and sill, peep into the room.

A young woman is stretched out on the mussed bed. She wears
a full slip, stockings, no shoes. She lies in and attitude
of physical relaxation, but her face, seen in the dimness of
the room, betrays a certain inner-tension, worrisome
conflicts. She is MARY CRANE, an tension, attractive girl
nearing the end of her twenties and her rope.

A man stands beside the bed, only the lower half of his figure
visible. We hold on this tableau for a long moment, then
start forward. As we pass under the window shade,

						CUT TO:

INT. THE HOTEL ROOM - (DAY)

A small room, a slow fan buzzing on a shelf above the narrow
bed. A card of hotel rules is pasted on the mirror above the
bureau. An unopened suitcase and a woman's large, straw open-
top handbag are on the bureau.

On the table beside the bed there are a container of Coco-
Cola and an unwrapped, untouched egg-salad sandwich. There
is no radio.

The man standing by the bed, wearing only trousers, T-shirt
and sox, is SAM LOOMIS, a good-looking, sensual shirt man
with warm humorous eyes and a compelling smile. He is blotting
his neck and face with a thin towel, and is staring down at
Mary, a small sweet smile playing about his mouth. Mary keeps
her face turned away from him.

After a moment, Sam drops the towel, sits on the bed, leans
over and takes Mary into his arms, kisses her long and warmly,
holds her with a firm possessiveness. The kiss is disturbed
and finally interrupted by the buzzing closeness of an
inconsiderate fly. Sam smiles, pulls away enough to allow
Mary to relax again against the pillow. He studies her, frowns
at her unresponsiveness, then speaks in a low, intimate,
playful voice.

		SAM
	Never did eat your lunch, did you.

Mary looks at his smile, has to respond, pulls him to her,
kisses him. Then, and without breaking the kiss, she swings
her legs over the side of the bed, toe-searches around, finds
her shoes, slips her feet into searches them. And finally
pulls away and sits up.

		MARY
	I better get back to the office.
	These extended lunch hours give my
	boss excess acid.

She rises, goes to the bureau, takes a pair of small earrings
out of her bag, begins putting them on, not bothering or
perhaps not wanting to look at herself in the mirror. Sam
watches her, concerned but unable to inhibit his cheery,
humorous good mood. Throughout remainder of this scene, they
occupy themselves with dressing, hair-combing, etc.

		SAM
	Call your boss and tell him you're
	taking the rest of the afternoon
	off. It's Friday anyway... and hot.

		MARY
		(soft sarcasm)
	What do I do with my free afternoon,
	walk you to the airport?

		SAM
		(meaningfully)
	We could laze around here a while
	longer.

		MARY
	Checking out time is three P.M. Hotels
	of this sort aren't interested in
	you when you come in, but when your
	time's up...
		(a small anguish)
	Sam, I hate having to be with you in
	a place like this.

		SAM
	I've heard of married couples who
	deliberately spend occasional nights
	in cheap hotels. They say it...

		MARY
		(interrupting)
	When you're married you can do a lot
	of things deliberately.

		SAM
	You sure talk like a girl who's been
	married.

		MARY
	Sam!

		SAM
	I'm sorry, Mary.
		(after a moment)
	My old Dad used to say 'when you
	can't change a situation, laugh at
	it.' Nothing ridicules a thing like
	laughing at it.

		MARY
	I've lost my girlish laughter.

		SAM
		(observing)
	The only girlish thing you have lost.

		MARY
		(a meaningful quiet,
		then, with difficulty:)
	Sam. This is the last time.

		SAM
	For what?

		MARY
	This! Meeting you in secret so we
	can be... secretive! You come down
	here on business trips and we steal
	lunch hours and... I wish you wouldn't
	even come.

		SAM
	Okay. What do we do instead, write
	each other lurid love letters?

		MARY
		(about to argue, then
		turning away)
	I haven't time to argue. I'm a working
	girl.

		SAM
	And I'm a working man! We're a regular
	working-class tragedy!
		(he laughs)

		MARY
	It is tragic! Or it will be... if we
	go on meeting in shabby hotels
	whenever you can find a tax-deductible
	excuse for flying down deductible
	here...

		SAM
		(interrupting,
		seriously)
	You can't laugh at it, huh?

		MARY
	Can you?

		SAM
	Sure. It's like laughing through a
	broken jaw, but...

He breaks off, his cheeriness dissolved, goes to the window,
tries to raise the shade. It sticks. He pulls at it.

It comes down entirely, and the hot sun glares into the room,
revealing it in all its shabbiness and sordidness as if
corroborating Mary's words and attitude. Sam kicks at the
fallen shade, laughs in frustration, grabs on to his humor
again.

		SAM
	And besides, when you say I make tax-
	deductible excuses you make me out a
	criminal.

		MARY
		(having to smile)
	You couldn't be a criminal if you
	committed a major crime.

		SAM
	I wish I were. Not an active criminal
	but... a nice guy with the conscience
	of a criminal.
		(goes close to mary,
		touches her)
	Next best thing to no conscience at
	all.

		MARY
		(pulling away)
	I have to go, Sam.

		SAM
	I can come down next week.

		MARY
	No.

		SAM
	Not even just to see you, to have
	lunch... in public?

		MARY
	We can see each other, we can even
	have dinner... but respectably, in
	my house with my mother's picture on
	the mantel and my sister helping me
	broil a big steak for three!

		SAM
	And after the steak... do we send
	Sister to the movies and turn Mama's
	picture to the wall?

		MARY
	Sam! No!

		SAM
		(after a pause, simply)
	All right.

She stares at him, surprised at his willingness to continue
the affair on her terms, as girls are so often surprised
when they discover men will continue to want them even after
the sexual bait has been pulled in. Sam smiles reassuringly,
places his hands gently on her arms, speaks with gentle and
simple sincerity.

		SAM
	Mary, whenever it's possible, tax-
	deductible or not, I want to see
	deductible you. And under any
	conditions.
		(a smile)
	Even respectability.

		MARY
	You make respectability sound...
	disrespectful.

		SAM
		(brightly)
	I'm all for it! It requires patience
	and temperance and a lot of sweating-
	out... otherwise, though, it's only
	hard work.
		(a pause)
	But if I can see you, touch you even
	as simply as this... I won't mind.

He moves away and again the weight of his pain and problems
crushes away his good humor. There is a quiet moment.

		SAM
	I'm fed up with sweating for people
	who aren't there. I sweat to pay off
	my father's debts... and he's in his
	grave... I sweat to pay my ex-wife
	alimony, and she's living on the
	other side of the world somewhere.

		MARY
		(a smile)
	I pay, too. They also pay who meet
	in hotel rooms.

		SAM
	A couple of years and the debts will
	be paid off. And if she ever re-
	marries, the alimony stops... and
	then...

		MARY
	I haven't even been married once
	yet!

		SAM
	Yeah, but when you do... you'll swing.

		MARY
		(smiling, then with a
		terrible urgency)
	Sam, let's go get married.

		SAM
	And live with me in a storeroom behind
	a hardware store in Fairvale. We'll
	have a lot of laughs. When I send my
	ex-wife her money, you can lick the
	stamps.

		MARY
		(a deep desperation)
	I'll lick the stamps.

He looks at her, long, pulls her close, kisses her lightly,
looks out the window and stares at the wide sky.

		SAM
	You know what I'd like? A clear,
	empty sky... and a plane, and us in
	it... and somewhere a private island
	for sale, where we can run around
	without our... shoes on.  And the
	wherewithal to buy what I'd like.
		(he moves away,
		suddenly serious)
	Mary, you want to cut this off, go
	out and find yourself someone
	available.

		MARY
	I'm thinking of it.

		SAM
		(a cheerful shout)
	How can you even think a thing like
	that!

		MARY
		(picking up handbag,
		starting for door)
	Don't miss your plane.

		SAM
	Hey, we can leave together can't we?

		MARY
		(at door)
	I'm late... and you have to put your
	shoes on.

Mary goes out quickly, closing door behind her. As Sam stares
down at his shoeless feet,

						CUT TO:

EXT. DOWNTOWN STREET - (DAY) - HIGH ANGLE

Shooting down at hotel entrance. Mary comes out, walks quickly
to a parked cab, gets in. The cab zooms up the awful street.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. LOWERY REAL ESTATE OFFICE - (DAY)

A small, moderately successful office off the main street. A
cab pulls up at the curb. We see Mary get out of cab, pay
driver, cross pavement to the office door.

INT. OUTER OFFICE - (DAY)

Mary enters office, crosses to her desk, sits down, rubs her
temples, finally looks over at Caroline, a girl in the last
of her teens.

		MARY
	Isn't Mr. Lowery back from lunch?

		CAROLINE
		(a high, bright, eager-
		to-talk voice laced
		to-with a vague Texan
		accent)
	He's lunching with the man who's
	buying the Harris Street property,
	you know, that oil lease man...  so
	that's why he's late.
		(a pause, then, as
		Mary does not respond
		to the pointed thrust)
	You getting a headache?

		MARY
	It'll pass. Headaches are like
	resolutions... you forget them soon
	as they stop hurting.

		CAROLINE
	You got aspirins? I have something...
	not aspirins, but
		(cheerfully takes
		bottle of pills out
		of desk drawer)
	my mother's doctor gave these to me
	the day of my wedding.
		(laughs)
	Teddy was furious when he found out
	I'd taken tranquilizers!

She rises, starts for Mary's desk, pills in hand.

		MARY
	Were there any calls?

		CAROLINE
	Teddy called.  Me... And my mother
	called to see if Teddy called. Oh,
	and your sister called to say she's
	going to Tucson to do some buying
	and she'll be gone the whole weekend
	and...

She breaks off, distracted by the SOUND of the door opening.
MR. LOWERY and his oil-lease client, TOM CASSIDY enter the
office. Lowery is a pleasant, worried-faced man, big and a
trifle pompous. Cassidy is very faced loud and has a lunch-
hour load on. He is a gross man, exuding a kind of pitiful
vulgarity.

		CASSIDY
	Wow! Hot as fresh milk! You girls
	should get your boss to air-condition
	you up. He can afford it today.

Lowery flashes an embarrassed smile at Mary, tries to lead
Cassidy toward the private office.

		LOWERY
	Mary, will you get those copies of
	the deed ready for Mr. Cassidy.

Cassidy pauses beside Mary's desk, hooks a haunch onto the
desktop, smiles a wet smile at Mary.

		CASSIDY
	Tomorrow's the day! My sweet little
	girl...
		(laughs as Mary looks
		up at him)
	Not you, my daughter!  A baby, and
	tomorrow she stands up there and
	gets her sweet self married away
	from me!
		(pulling out wallet)
	I want you to look at my baby.
	Eighteen years old... and she's never
	had an unhappy day in any one of
	those years!
		(flashes photo)

Mary glances, cannot bring herself to smile or make some
remark, continues sorting out the deed copies, tries to ignore
the man's hot-breath closeness.

		LOWERY
	Come on, Tom, my office is air-
	conditioned.

		CASSIDY
		(ignoring Lowery)
	You know what I do with unhappiness?
	I buy it off! You unhappy?

		MARY
	Not inordinately.
		(puts deed copy into
		Cassidy's too-close
		hand)

		CASSIDY
	I'm buying this house for my baby's
	wedding present. Forty thousand
	dollars, cash! Now that ain't buying
	happiness, that's buying off
	unhappiness! That penniless punk
	she's marryin'...
		(laughs)
	Probably a good kid... it's just
	that I hate him.
		(looks at deed)
	Yup! Forty thousand, says here...
		(to Lowery)
	Casharoonie!

He takes out of his inside pocket, two separate bundles of
new $100 bills and throws them onto the desk, under Mary's
nose. Caroline's eyes go wide at the sight of the glorious
green bundles of bills, and she comes close to the desk.
Cassidy leans terribly close to Mary, flicks through the
bills, laughs wickedly.

		CASSIDY
	I never carry more than I can afford
	to lose!
		(closer to Mary)
	Count 'em!

		LOWERY
		(shocked, worried)
	Tom... cash transactions of this
	size! Most irregular...

		CASSIDY
	So what? It's my private money!
		(laughs, winks, elbows
		Lowery)
	And now it's yours.

		CAROLINE
		(staring at the money)
	I declare!

		CASSIDY
		(whispering)
	I don't! That's how I'm able to keep
	it!
		(laughs)

		LOWERY
		(hastily interrupting)
	Suppose we just put this in the safe
	and then Monday morning when you're
	feeling good...

		CASSIDY
	Speakin' of feeling good, where's
	that bottle you said you had in your
	desk...
		(laughs, as if having
		given away Lowery's
		secret)
	Oops!
		(to Mary, patting her
		arm)
	Usually I can keep my mouth shut!

He rises, reels toward Lowery's office, pauses, turns, speaks
to Mary, meaningfully.

		CASSIDY
	Honest. I can keep any private
	transaction a secret... any pri....
		(stopped by Mary's
		cold gaze)
	Lowery! I'm dyin' of thirstaroonie!

Lowery starts after him, pauses, turns to Mary. Cassidy has
gone into Lower's office.

		LOWERY
		(quietly)
	I don't even want it in the office
	over the weekend. Put it in the safe
	deposit box, at the bank, Mary. And
	we'll get him to give us a check on
	Monday - instead.

He starts quickly away when it looks like Cassidy is going
to come and pull him bodily into the office. When the men
are gone and the door is closed, Caroline picks up a bundle,
smiles at it.

		CAROLINE
	He was flirting with you. I guess he
	noticed my wedding ring.

Mary has put one bundle into a large envelope and takes the
other from Caroline. When the bills are away, she puts the
filled envelope in her handbag, notices the remaining deed
copies on her desk, picks them up, goes to the private office
door, knocks, starts to open door as:

		LOWERY (O.S.)
	Come in.

INT. LOWERY'S PRIVATE OFFICE - (DAY)

Mary opens door, looks in. Cassidy is drinking from a large
tumbler, winks at her without pausing in his drinking. Mary
remains on threshold a moment, then crosses to the desk,
talking as she goes.

		MARY
	The copies. Mr. Lowery, if you don't
	mind, I'd like to go right on home
	after the bank. I have a slight...

		CASSIDY
	You go right home!  Me and your boss
	are going out to get ourselves a
	little drinkin' done!
		(to Lowery)
	Right?

		LOWERY
		(to Mary)
	Of course. You feeling ill?

		MARY
	A headache.

		CASSIDY
	You need a week-end in Las Vegas...
	playground of the world!

		MARY
	I'm going to spend this week-end in
	bed.
		(starts out)

		CASSIDY
		(to Lowery)
	Only playground that beats Las Vegas!

Mary goes back out into the outer office, closes door.

INT. OUTER OFFICE - (DAY)

Mary goes to her desk, takes the handbag, checks to make
sure the money-filled envelope is tucked well down into it.
During this:

		CAROLINE
	Aren't you going to take the pills?
		(as Mary shakes her
		head)
	They'll knock that headache out.

		MARY
	I don't need pills... just sleep.

She goes to the door.

				       DISSOLVE:

INT. MARY'S BEDROOM - (DAY)

A double bed in the foreground. We just see the far side as
the CAMERA SHOOTS across. Mary enters the scene, clad only
in her slip. Perhaps she is about to get into bed. Behind
her is an open closet, but too dark inside for us to see any
contents. As Mary turns to the closet the CAMERA LOWERS to
show a close view of the $40,000 in the envelope on our side
of the bed.

Mary takes a dress from the closet and starts to put it on
as the CAMERA RETREATS to reveal a packed but not yet closed
suitcase also on the bed. Mary zips up her dress and then
brings some final garments from the closet.

She comes around to the suitcase and puts them on the top.
Mary works with haste and in tension, as if acting on an
impulse which might vanish as quickly as it came.

The suitcase filled now, she checks around the room, then
takes her handbag to the bed, puts in the money-filled
envelope, and then slams the suitcase shut. Then filled she
looks at her small bedroom desk, goes to it, removes a small
file-envelope from one of the drawers. It is one of those
brown envelopes in which one keeps important papers and
policies and certificates. She checks its contents briefly,
puts it on the bed, opens another desk drawer, takes out her
bank book, tosses it on the bed. Then she packs both the
file-envelope and the bank book, into her handbag, takes one
quick last look around the room, picks up the handbag and
the suitcase and goes out of the room.

						CUT TO:

EXT. MARY'S GARAGE - (DAY)

A two-car garage. One car is gone. Mary's car is parked in
the driveway. The CAMERA is low enough so that we can easily
read the Arizona number plate in the foreground.

Mary comes out of house, starts for the trunk, intending to
put the suitcase in, changes her mind, places the suitcase
and her handbag on the front seat, gets in, starts the car,
begins to back out of driveway.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. MAIN STREET IN MIDTOWN PHOENIX - (DAY)

We are close on Mary's car, shooting in at her troubled,
guilty face. She seems to be driving with that excess care
of one who does not wish to be stopped for a minor traffic
irregularity. She stops for a red light at a main
intersection.

FROM MARY'S VIEWPOINT - (DAY)

We see Lowery and Cassidy crossing the street, passing right
in front of Mary's car.

MARY'S CAR - (DAY)

Mary freezes.

EXT. MAIN STREET IN MIDTOWN PHOENIX - (DAY)

Cassidy, glancing into car, sees Mary, lets out a cheery
exclamation, elbows Lowery. Lowery turns, sees Mary, smiles
pleasantly, pulls Cassidy on.

MARY'S CAR - (DAY)

Mary watches the entire exchange with a look of stony horror
on her face.

EXT. MAIN STREET IN MIDTOWN PHOENIX - (DAY)

Now we look closely at Lowery. As he reaches the curb, a
small confusion brightens his face. He remembers that Mary
intended to "spend the weekend in bed." He considers,
curiously, turns, looks back at her, a slight frown on his
face.

MARY'S CAR - (DAY)

Mary sees the pause and the look.

EXT. MAIN STREET IN MIDTOWN PHOENIX - (DAY)

For a moment it even looks as if Lowery might be meaning to
cross back to the car.

MARY'S CAR - (DAY)

Mary's tension is unbearable. And at that moment we hear the
shrill shriek of the traffic cop's whistle.

Mary zooms the car away.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. HIGHWAY - (DAY)

Mary in car, driving, safely away from town. Her look is
less tense now, and more purposeful. After a moment, she
checks the fuel gauge, frowns, looks along highway for a gas
station.

				      FAST DISSOLVE TO:

MARY'S CAR - (DAY)

Approaching and leaving city limits.

MARY - (DAY)

Looks at gas gauge.

C.U. GAS GAUGE - (DAY)

EXT. A GAS STATION - (DAY)

We see Mary's car drive in, come to a stop. There are no
other cars about, this being a gas station off the main
highway, and the attendant is obviously in the shack. Mary
looks worried about having to make this stop, keeps her face
turned away from the shack, not wishing it to be seen.

No one comes and for a moment Mary considers driving on, as
if the emptiness of the station were a warning, an omen that
she should listen to. But the gas registers almost empty.
She has to blow her horn.

A YOUNG MAN comes out of the shack, starts toward her car.

At that moment, we HEAR the RINGING of the TELEPHONE in the
shack. The Attendant walks a few steps further, toward Mary's
car, then decides to go back and answer the phone. The phone's
insistent ringing unnerves Mary.

She starts her car, zooms off.

We see the Attendant, phone in hand, in the doorway of shack.
He looks after the departing car with little or no expression.

CAR

The car grows smaller as it races up the road. The sun is
setting. There is something vaguely ominous about the
darkening sky into which the car seems to be disappearing.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

MARY IN CAR - (NIGHT)

The oncoming headlights hurt Mary's eyes. She is getting
sleepy and her vision is blurring. Her eyes close,
involuntarily, snap open again. She stretches than wide, as
if forcing them to stay open. The oncoming lights seem to
glare to a point beyond endurance. She murmurs "Sam - Sam."

				     LONG LAP DISSOLVE:

EXT. ROAD SHOULDER - (DAWN)

We see Mary's car, dim in the early dawn, tilted on the soft
shoulder of the road, looking somehow sad and pathetic, like
a child's thrown-away toy. And from this angle it would appear
that the car is empty.

After a moment, during which there are no other vehicles
passing, we see, coming from the far distance, a HIGHWAY
PATROLMAN in a patrol car. He passes Mary's car, notes its
apparent emptiness, U-turns, comes back up behind the car.
He gets out and approaches the driver's side window.

EXT. MARY'S CAR - (DAWN)

The Patrolman looks down into the car.

INT. CAR (DAWN) FROM HIS VIEWPOINT

Mary turns with a start, sits up, is startled and unnerved
by the sight of the Patrolman, and, as if by automatic reflex,
turns the ignition and presses down on the starter.

EXT. CAR (DAWN)

The Patrolman holds up his hand.

		PATROLMAN
		(startled)
	Hold it there!

Mary slams down on the brake, tries to pull herself together.
The Patrolman raps again, less gently.

Reluctantly, Mary rolls down the window. The Patrolman studies
her for a moment.

		PATROLMAN
	In quite a hurry.

		MARY
	Yes.
		(because he seems to
		be awaiting an
		explanation)
	I didn't mean to sleep so long. I
	was afraid I'd have an accident last
	night, from sleepiness... so I decided
	to pull over...

		PATROLMAN
	You slept here all night?

		MARY
		(a faint edge of
		defensiveness)
	Yes. As I said, I couldn't keep my
	eyes...

		PATROLMAN
		(mere concern)
	There are plenty of motels in this
	area. You should have... I mean,
	just to be safe...

		MARY
	I didn't intend to sleep all night!
	I just pulled over... have I broken
	any laws?

		PATROLMAN
	No, m'am.

		MARY
	Then I'm free to go...?

		PATROLMAN
		(a pause)
	Is anything wrong?

		MARY
	Of course not! Am I acting as if...
	something's wrong?

		PATROLMAN
		(almost a smile)
	Frankly, yes.

		MARY
	Please... I'd like to go...

		PATROLMAN
	Is there?

		MARY
	Is there what?
		(not waiting for an
		answer)
	I've told you there's nothing wrong...
	except that I'm in a hurry and you're
	taking up my time...

		PATROLMAN
		(interrupting, sternly)
	Now wait just a moment! Turn your
	motor off, please.

Mary seems about to object, thinks better of it, turns off
the ignition.

		PATROLMAN
	In the course of my duty, I never
	"take up" anyone's time, whether
	it's to give a warning, or a ticket,
	or help! Believe that, M'am.
		(a little softer)
	Now if you woke up on the wrong side
	of... the car seat, that's one thing.
	But when you act as if I've just
	placed you under arrest...

		MARY
	I'm sorry.

		PATROLMAN
	No need to apologize...

Mary starts the car, her face turned as if she wishes the
matter were all settled and the Patrolman had already gone.
The Patrolman isn't exactly one of those civil servants who
demands a thank-you, but he does feel her manner is a bit
too abrupt. He calls:

		PATROLMAN
	Wait a minute!

		MARY
		(jamming down the
		brake)
	Now what?

The Patrolman gazes at her a moment, then:

		PATROLMAN
	May I see your license?

		MARY
	Why?

		PATROLMAN
	Please.

Mary pulls her handbag up from the floor, where she'd placed
it when she stretched out for sleep. She puts her hand in
it, rummages for her wallet, cannot find it.

The Patrolman is staring at her. She glances at him nervously,
pokes in her bag a bit more, sighs, realizes she'll have to
remove some of its contents. Nervously, badly controlling
her fear, she takes out the money-filled envelope, and then
the important papers envelope, filled then a couple of other
items, places them on the seat, finally finds her wallet,
opens it, hands it to him. He looks at the wallet, then at
the car.

EXT. ROAD SHOULDER - (DAWN)

The Patrolman walks around to the front of the car, checks
the license plate, and returns.

INT. MARY'S CAR - (DAWN)

The Patrolman peers in, checks the car registration on the
steering wheel, returns Mary's wallet.

She takes it, looks at him for a flicker of a moment.

He says nothing. She starts ahead, fast.

EXT. ROAD SHOULDER - (DAWN)

The Patrolman stares after Mary as she drives off, then starts
back to his automobile.

MARY IN CAR - (DAWN)

She is quite shaken, realizes she caused herself a great
deal of trouble and placed herself in unnecessary danger.
She is disturbed and angry and frightened at her inability
to act normally under the pressure of guilt. As she drives,
she glances into her rear-view mirror.

MARY'S REAR-VIEW MIRROR - (DAWN)

The Patrolman is following in his automobile, keeping behind
her at a matched speed.

MARY IN CAR - (DAWN)

She glances out at her surroundings.

MARY'S POV - (DAWN)

The Freeway ahead.

EXT. MARY'S CAR - (DAWN)

She suddenly turns off the highway.

MARY IN CAR - (DAWN)

She checks her mirror.

MARY'S REAR-VIEW MIRROR - (DAWN)

The Patrolman is no longer following, has not turned off
after her.

MARY IN CAR - (DAWN)

She breathes a sigh of relief, thinks a moment, makes a quick
decision.

				       DISSOLVE:

EXT. USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

The big sign reads "California Charlie - Automobile Paradise."
We see Mary's car drive onto the lot and stop. Mary gets out
of the car, glances toward the lot office, turns her attention
to the line of cars, notice the California licence plates on
all of them. The CAR DEALER calls out from his office:

		CAR DEALER
	With you in a second!

Mary nods, starts walking along the line of cars as if making
a selection. Her eye is caught by the iron newspaper stand
on the corner, just outside the lot.

She stares at the papers, turns away, as if what she is
fearing would have to be impossible, then, having to satisfy
herself, goes to the stand, drops a dime in the iron slot,
picks up a LOS ANGELES newspaper, starts back into the car
lot as she glances worried at the front page. As she goes,
we see, coming up the street toward the lot, the same
PATROLMAN. He sees Mary, slows, swerves over to the opposite
side of the street, stops by the curb. Mary, engrossed in
the newspaper, and walking back ease the lot, does not see
the Patrolman.

The car dealer is out on the lot now, standing and waiting
for Mary. As she approaches, lost in her newspaper, he smiles.

		CAR DEALER
	I'm in no mood for trouble!

		MARY
		(glancing up, thrown
		for a moment)
	What?

		CAR DEALER
		(cheerfully)
	There's an old saying, "First customer
	of the day is always the most
	trouble!" But like I said, I'm in no
	mood for it so I'm just going to
	treat you so fair and square you
	won't have one human reason to give
	me...

		MARY
		(interrupting)
	Can I trade in my car and take
	another?

		CAR DEALER
	You can do anything you've a mind
	to... and bein' a woman, you will!
		(chin-indicating her
		car)
	That yours?

		MARY
	Yes, it's... nothing wrong with it,
	I'm just...

		CAR DEALER
	Sick of the sight of it!
		(laughs)
	Well, suppose you look around for
	something that strikes your eyes and
	meanwhile I'll have my mechanic give
	yours the once over and... want some
	coffee? I was just about...

		MARY
	No. Thank you. I'm in... a hurry. I
	just want to make a change and
	start...

She stops suddenly, almost with a gasp. She has seen the
Patrolman.

THE PATROLMAN - MARY'S POV - (DAY)

He is staring over at her, his face dispassionate.

EXT. USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

Mary has to force herself to look away.

		CAR DEALER
	One thing people never ought to be
	when they're buying a used car is in
	a hurry!
		(starting away toward
		her car)
	But like I said, too nice a day for
	arguing. I'll just shoot this into
	the garage.

He starts into Mary's car. She looks at him, in near panic,
wanting to skip the whole thing. Torn, wondering if the
presence of the Patrolman doesn't negate the value of changing
cars, wondering how she can get away, wondering if she'll be
followed, or if the Patrolman will go away if she does stay
here.

All these panic-fears rush her mind and she can do nothing.
The Car Dealer has driven her car into the garage. She stands
in the middle of the lot, feeling like a shooting target.
She looks toward the garage.

THE GARAGE - MARY'S POV - (DAY)

Mary's car is in it.

EXT. USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

Mary decides she cannot back out now without arousing further
suspicion, is compelled to look again at the Patrolman.

THE PATROLMAN - MARY'S POV - (DAY)

He still watches. With a self-angry sigh of resignment, she
goes to a close car, looks at it. The Car Dealer is returning.

		CAR DEALER
	That's the one I'd've picked for you
	myself!

		MARY
	How much?

		CAR DEALER
	Go ahead! Spin it around the block.
	Now I know you don't know anything
	about engine condition, but you can
	feel, can't you... and it's all in
	the feel, believe me, you feel that
	one around the block...

		MARY
	It looks fine. How much will it be,
	with my car...?

		CAR DEALER
	You mean you don't want the usual
	day and a half to think it over?
		(laughs)
	You are in a hurry! Somebody chasin'
	you?

		MARY
	Of course not. Please.

		CAR DEALER
	Well... heck, this is the first time
	I ever saw the customer high-pressure
	the salesman!
		(laughs, sees she is
		in no mood for it)
	I'd figure roughly...
		(looks at the car,
		then back at the
		garage)
	...your car plus five hundred.

		MARY
	Five hundred.

		CAR DEALER
	Aha! Always got time to argue money,
	huh...?

		MARY
	All right.

As the car dealer looks at her in amazement, she reaches
into her bag, feels the money-filled envelope, pauses.

		CAR DEALER
		(slowly)
	I take it... you can prove that car's
	yours... I mean, out of state and
	all... got your pink slip and your...

		MARY
	I think I have the necessary papers.
	Is there a Ladies Room...

		CAR DEALER
	In the building ...
		(indicates, continues
		to stare quietly)
	Mary starts for the building, glancing
	once in the direction of the
	Patrolman.

THE PATROLMAN - MARY'S POV - (DAY)

He still sits, his motor throbbing, his face quiet.

EXT. THE USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

Mary goes into the office building.

						CUT TO:

INT. LADIES ROOM - (DAY)

Mary enters, locks door, takes envelope out of her handbag,
extracts one bundle of bills from the envelope, counts off
five, puts the bundle back into the envelope and the envelope
back into the bag. Then she remembers, takes out the important
papers envelope, goes through it, finds several papers having
to do with her car, takes them all out, puts back the
envelope, starts out of the ladies Room.

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

The Car Dealer has moved the car of her choice out of the
line. It stands in the clearing.

		CAR DEALER
		(too cheerfully)
	I think you'd better give it a trial
	spin. Don't want any bad word of
	mouth about California Charlie.

		MARY
	I'd really rather not. Please.  Can't
	we just settle this and...

		CAR DEALER
	I'll be perfectly honest with you,
	Ma'am. It's not that I don't trust
	you, but...

		MARY
		(interrupting)
	But what?  Is there anything so
	terribly wrong about... making a
	decision and wanting to hurry? Do
	you think I've stolen... my car?

		CAR DEALER
	No, M'am. I was only about to say,
	I've sent my mechanic out to give
	your car a little test... that's
	all.

		MARY
		(handing him the
		ownership papers and
		the new bills)
	I'd like to be ready when he gets
	back.

		CAR DEALER
	Okay. If you'll come along...

He starts toward the office building. Mary follows, closely,
anxiously. She glances, sees:

THE PATROLMAN - MARY'S POV - (DAY)

He is still at the far curb.

EXT. USED CAR LOT - (DAY)

The Car Dealer goes into his office. Mary follows.

THE PATROLMAN - (DAY)

A second later, he starts his automobile, checks traffic,
comes across the street, slowly, and drives onto the lot. He
pauses a moment, then drives across the lot, passing the
office, going on to the other exit, stops there as Mary's
car is driven back onto the lot.

The MECHANIC stops Mary's car, hops out, waves to the
Patrolman. The Patrolman waves back, goes on a bit until he
is behind Mary's car, stops again, looks over at the office.
In a moment, Mary comes out, hurries across to her new car,
gets in, starts the motor. The Mechanic yells:

		MECHANIC
	Hey! Miss?

Mary pauses, turns, sees the Patrolman, then the Mechanic.
Her face goes white. She doesn't know which man called her.
Then the Mechanic waves, starts forward with her suitcase.

		MARY
		(as Mechanic reaches
		car)
	Just put it right in here, please...
	beside me.

The Mechanic smiles, throws the suitcase in. Mary zooms off.
As she drives out of lot we see the Mechanic, the Car Dealer
and the Patrolman all looking after her.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

MARY IN NEW CAR ON ROUTE

Mary is driving tensely. She checks the rear-view mirror, is
more shocked than pleased when she sees...

MARY'S REAR-VIEW MIRROR

No sign of the Patrolman.

MARY IN NEW CAR ON ROUTE

She turns her face, looks out at the highway.

ROUTE 99 - MARY'S POV

It is heavy with traffic.

MARY IN NEW CAR ON ROUTE

Again she checks the mirror and although...

MARY'S REAR-VIEW MIRROR

There is still no sign of the Patrolman.

MARY IN NEW CAR ON ROUTE

She cannot relax or feel safe, cannot convince herself that
nothing will come of the man's watching and suspicions.

CAMERA IS CLOSE on Mary's face now, recording her anxiety,
her fears. Her guilt shines bright in her eyes and she is a
person unaccustomed to containing this much guilt in this
realistic a situation. Suddenly, we hear the SOUND of the
Used Car Dealer's laugh, hear it as clearly as Mary hears it
in her imagination. The "imagined voice" we hear is actually
the voice of the Car Dealer:

		CAR DEALER'S VOICE
	Heck, Officer, that was the first
	time I ever saw the Customer high-
	pressure the Salesman!  Somebody
	chasing her?

		PATROLMAN'S VOICE
	I better have a look at those papers,
	Charlie.

		CAR DEALER'S VOICE
	She look like a wrong-one to you?

		PATROLMAN'S VOICE
	Acted like one.

Mary blinks, shakes her head, as if trying to shake away
these voices of her imagination. She checks the rear-view
mirror.

MARY'S REAR-VIEW MIRROR

Still no sight of the Patrolman.

MARY IN NEW CAR

She tries to force herself to relax, almost succeeds when
she is sprung to tension again by....

EXT. HIGHWAY

The sight of a police car. As she drives past, we hear the
squeaky, unintelligible voice coming over the car radio.
Mary zooms down on the gas, whizzes ahead.

				   DISSOLVE THROUGH TO:

EXT. HIGHWAY 99 - LONG SHOT

Mary's car dashing along.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

MARY IN NEW CAR

Mary looks weary, tired with strain and with hard driving.
Her eyes are heavy with worry and deep thought.

OUT THE WINDSHIELD

We can see that it is much later in the day, almost dusk.

MARY IN NEW CAR

We HEAR the sound of an agitated BUZZ of an intercom system,
a sound emanating from Mary's imagination.

After the second BUZZ, we HEAR the voice of Caroline.

		CAROLINE'S VOICE
	Yes, Mr. Lowery.

		LOWERY'S VOICE
		(a worried tone)
	Caroline...? Mary still isn't in?

		CAROLINE'S VOICE
	No, Mr. Lowery... but then she's
	always a bit late on Monday mornings.

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	Buzz me the minute she comes in.

Again Mary shakes her head, forces herself to stop hearing
these "invented" scenes of her imagination.

EXT. HIGHWAY

Now we cut to the view of the road, from Mary's viewpoint.
Darkness of evening is coming. In the dim twilight we see
the neon sign of roadside restaurants and gas stations
beginning to blaze on.

INT. MARY'S NEW CAR

Back on Mary's face, and after a moment, the imagined voices
again:

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	Call her sister! If no one's answering
	at the house....

		CAROLINE'S VOICE
	I called her sister, Mr. Lowery,
	where she works, the Music Makers
	Music Store, you know? And she doesn't
	know where Mary is any more than we
	do.

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	You better run out to the house.
	She may be... unable to answer the
	phone...

		CAROLINE'S VOICE
	Her sister's going to do that.  She's
	as worried as we are.

A flush of painful guilt and regret rises up in Mary's face.
She closes her eyes for one tight swift moment.

EXT. HIGHWAY

We cut again to the highway. The first oncoming headlights
slash at the windshield.

INT. MARY'S NEW CAR

Cutting back to Mary, we can sense by the tense muscles of
her face that she is driving faster. The oncoming headlights
blurt at her.

Suddenly we HEAR Lowery's voice, loud now and frightened, as
if the anxiety in the man's voice was strong enough to break
through Mary's effort to keep her mind silent and her
imagination blank.

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	No! I haven't the faintest idea.  As
	I said, I last saw your sister when
	she left this office on Friday...
	she said she didn't feel well and
	wanted to leave early and I said she
	could. And that was the last I saw...
		(a pause, a thought)
	...wait a minute, I did see her, an
	hour or so later, driving...
		(a pause, then with
		solemn fear)
	Ah, I think you'd better come over
	here to my office. Quick.
		(a pause, a click)
	Caroline, get Mr. Cassidy for me.

EXT. HIGHWAY

It is completely dark now, night.

INT. MARY'S NEW CAR

We cut back to her face.

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	After all, Cassidy, I told you...
	all that cash... I'm not taking the
	responsibility... Oh, for heaven's
	sake, a girl works for you for ten
	years, you trust her! All right,
	yes, you better come over.

FROM MARY'S VIEWPOINT

EXT. THE ROAD AHEAD INT. MARY'S NEW CAR

Fast cut back to Mary's face. Oncoming headlights throw a
blinding light across her features.

		CASSIDY'S VOICE
		(undrunk, sharp with
		rage)
	Well I ain't about to kiss off forty
	thousand dollars! I'll get it back
	and if any of it's missin' I'll
	replace it with her fine soft flesh!
	I'll track her, never you doubt it!

		LOWERY'S VOICE
	Hold on, Cassidy... I still can't
	believe... it must be some kind of a
	mystery... I can't...

		CASSIDY'S VOICE
	You checked with the bank, no?  They
	never laid eyes on her, no?  You
	still trustin'? Hot creepers, she
	sat there while I dumped it out...
	hardly even looked at it, plannin'
	and... and even flirtin' with me...!

A look of revulsion makes Mary close her eyes.

THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD AGAIN

Big drops of rain begin to appear.

CLOSEUP - MARY

She is becoming aware of the rain starting.

THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD

The rain increasing and backlit by the oncoming headlights.

CLOSEUP - MARY

Mary starts the windshield wipers.

THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD

The wipers are having a battle with the now torrential rain.

CLOSEUP - MARY

Peering through the blurred windshield.

CLOSEUP - THE CAR WHEELS

slowing down in the flooding highway.

CLOSEUP - MARY

peering through the windshield. The oncoming lights are fewer.

CLOSEUP - THE CAR WHEELS

almost coming to a slow turn.

THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD

just blackness and rain.

CLOSEUP - MARY

peering.

MARY'S VIEWPOINT

An almost undiscernible light in the far distance, a neon
sign blurred by the rain-sheeted windshield.

MARY'S CAR

She presses down, forces the car to move on through the
flooded road.

EXT. THE ROAD

As we move closer, we see the neon sign more clearly and can
faintly make out the large letters which read "Motel."  Mary
stops the car, lowers the window slightly, looks out. We see
the sign clearly now: "BATES MOTEL." Mary opens the car door
and dashes out into the rain and up onto the porch of the
motel office.

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (NIGHT)

Mary pauses on the porch. The lights are on within the office.
She tries door, finds it open, goes into office. CAMERA
FOLLOWS her into office. There is no one present. Mary goes
to the desk, rings a small pushbell. There is no response.
Mary rubs her forehead in weariness and frustration, goes
back out onto the porch. She looks off in another direction,
slightly behind the office, and sees...

MARY'S VIEWPOINT - A LARGE OLD HOUSE - (NIGHT)

A path from the motel office leads directly up to this house.
There is a light on in one of the upstairs rooms. A WOMAN
passes the window, pauses, peers out.

We see her in clear silhouette. She quickly goes away from
the window.

EXT. PORCH OF BATES' MOTEL - (NIGHT)

Mary, having seen the woman, expects now that she will get
some attention. She stands a few moments, waiting.

No one comes. Impatience and anger rise in Mary. She dashes
out into the rain, to her car, gets in, opens the side window,
begins to honk the horn. After a moment, a YOUNG MAN open
the front door of the house, pauses, starts down the path.
After a few steps, he turns and runs back into the house.
Mary leaves her car, starts a dash for the shelter of the
porch. As she runs, we see that the Young Man has gone back
only to get an umbrella. Seeing that Mary is on her way to
the porch, he runs quickly, the umbrella unopened in his
hand. He gets to the porch a moment after Mary has reached
it.

He stops short, looks at her, then at the umbrella hanging
useless in his hand, then back to her.

There is something sadly touching in his manner, in his look.
Mary's impatience goes and she smiles and this makes him
almost smile. He gestures her into the office, standing back
to indicate that he will go after her. She goes into the
office.

INT. OFFICE OF BATES' MOTEL - (NIGHT)

The Young Man follows Mary in, closes the door. He is NORMAN
BATES, somewhere in his late twenties, thin and tall, soft-
spoken and hesitant.

		NORMAN
	Dirty night.

		MARY
		(not really a question)
	You have a vacancy?

		NORMAN
		(simply, almost
		cheerfully)
	We have twelve vacancies. Twelve
	cabins, twelve vacancies.
		(a pause)
	They moved away the highway.

		MARY
	I thought I'd gotten off the main...

		NORMAN
	I knew you must have. No one stops
	here anymore unless they do.

He is behind the counter now, pushing forward the registration
book.

		NORMAN
	But it's no good dwelling on our
	losses, is it.  We go right ahead
	lighting signs and following the
	formalities...  Would you sign,
	please.

Mary has placed her handbag on the counter. She takes the
registration book, picks up the pen, is suddenly struck with
the realization that she'd better use an alias. She writes
the name Marie Samuels.

		NORMAN
	Your home address. Oh, just the town
	will do.

		MARY
		(glancing at newspaper
		sticking out of her
		handbag)
	Los Angeles.

She realizes he didn't ask her to tell him, merely to write
it down. She smiles, writes Los Angeles beside the false
name. Norman smiles, stops smiling out of embarrassment.

		NORMAN
	Cabin One. It's closer in case you
	want anything... right next to the
	office.

CLOSEUP - NORMAN

He removes a key for Cabin One. We see that there is a
remaining key on the board.

TWO SHOT - MARY AND NORMAN

		MARY
	I want sleep more than anything.
	Except maybe, food.

		NORMAN
	There's a big diner about ten miles
	on up... just outside Fairvale.

		MARY
	Am I that close to Fairvale?

		NORMAN
	Fifteen miles. I'll get your bags.

He goes to door, opens it. The rain has slowed down
considerably. He smiles at this fact, as if to communicate
some pleasure he finds in it. Mary follows him to the door,
goes out on the porch, waits and watches as Norman runs to
her car, gets in, drives it to the parking space in front of
Cabin One. Mary walks along the porch, waits before the door
of Cabin One.

Norman gets out of car, with suitcase, runs to the door,
opens it, pushes the door open, puts his hand in and switches
on a light. Mary goes into the cabin. Norman follows her.

INT. CABIN ONE - (NIGHT)

Norman places suitcase on bed, goes to the window, opens it.

		NORMAN
	Stuffy in here.
		(turns to her)
	Well... the mattress is soft and
	there're hangers in the closet and...
	stationary with "Bates' Motel" printed
	on it in case you want to make your
	friends back home envious... and...
	the... over there....
		(he points to the
		bathroom, fairly
		blushes)

		MARY
	The bathroom.

		NORMAN
		(quickly, starting to
		leave)
	I'll be in the office if you want
	anything... just tap on the wall.

		MARY
	Thank you, Mr. Bates.

		NORMAN
	Norman Bates.

He pauses at the door, gazes at her. She smiles.

		NORMAN
	You have something most girls never
	have.

		MARY
	I have?

		NORMAN
	There's no name for it... But it's
	something that, that puts a person
	at ease.

		MARY
	Thank you. Again.

		NORMAN
		(not really a question)
	You're not going to go out again and
	drive up to that diner, are you?

		MARY
	No.

		NORMAN
	Then will you do me a favor?
		(without waiting for
		her response)
	Will you have supper here?  I was
	just about to, myself... nothing
	more than some sandwiches and a lot
	of milk, but I'd like it if you'd
	come up to the house and... I don't
	set a fancy table but... the kitchen's
	awful homey.

		MARY
	I'd like to.

		NORMAN
	All right, you get your dresses
	hanging out and... change those wet
	shoes, and I'll come for you soon as
	it's ready...
		(starts out)
	...with my trusty umbrella.
		(he laughs a small
		laugh, runs off)

Mary closes the door, goes to suitcase, opens it, starts to
take out a dress. Her handbag is next to the suitcase. She
glances down into it, pauses, drops the dress, reaches into
the handbag, takes out the money-filled envelope, stares at
it, almost with regret, filled contemplates hiding it, decides
to, starts looking for a reasonable hiding place. She looks
about, at the closet, the drawers etc., realizes all such
places are obvious. Catching sight of the newspaper in her
bag, she hits on a solution. She opens the newspaper, places
the envelope within it, lock-folds the paper again and then
places it on the bedside table as if it were there for later
reading. She considers this for a moment, accepts it, goes
to her suitcase to start unpacking.

Suddenly the quiet is shattered by the shrill, ugly sound of
a woman's voice, raised in anger.

		WOMAN'S VOICE
	No! I tell you no!

Mary walks slowly to the window, realizing that the terrible
voice is coming from the house behind the cabins. CAMERA
FOLLOWS her to window and once there we see the light is
still on in the upstairs bedroom and the voice is coming
from that room. The rain has stopped and the moon is out.

		WOMAN'S VOICE
	I won't have you bringing strange
	young girls in for supper...
		(an ugly, sneering
		note creeps into the
		voice)
	...by candlelight, I suppose, in the
	cheap erotic fashion of young men
	with cheap, erotic minds!

		NORMAN'S VOICE
	Mother, please...

		WOMAN'S VOICE
	And then what? After supper, music?
	Whispers?

		NORMAN'S VOICE
	Mother, she's just a stranger...
	hungry, and the weather's bad...

		WOMAN'S VOICE
		(mimicking cruelly)
	Mother, she's just a stranger!
		(hard, cruel again)
	As if men don't desire strangers, as
	if... oh, I refuse to speak of
	disgusting things because they disgust
	me! You understand, Boy?

		WOMAN'S VOICE
		(pause)
	Go on, go tell her she'll not be
	appeasing her ugly appetite with my
	food... or my son! Or do I have to
	tell her, cause you don't have the
	guts? Huh, boy? You have the guts,
	boy?

		NORMAN'S VOICE
		(blurted cut fury and
		shame)
	Shut up! Shut up!

There is the SOUND of a door closing in that room up there.
Mary has stood by the window, listening with mounting distress
and concern and sympathy. She turns her face away now, gazes
sadly at the little empty room.

In a moment there is the SOUND of the house's front door
slamming shut. Mary turns, looks out the window.

FROM MARY'S VIEWPOINT - (NIGHT)

We see Norman coming down the path, carrying a napkin-covered
tray.

INT. CABIN ONE - (NIGHT)

Mary looks at him for a moment, then turns quickly, goes to
the door, opens it and goes out onto the porch.

EXT. THE MOTEL PORCH - (NIGHT)

Mary pauses outside the door, is about to start forward when
Norman comes round the building and walks along the porch,
past the office, stopping only when he is close to her. He
stares with painful embarrassment at the knowing look in her
eye.

		MARY
	I've caused you some trouble.

		NORMAN
	Mother...
		(a hollow little laugh,
		an attempt at sardonic
		humor)
	...what is the phrase... "she isn't
	herself today"... I think that's it.

		MARY
		(looking at the tray)
	You shouldn't have bothered. I really
	don't have that much of an appetite.

Norman flinches, realizing she has heard his mother's
reference to Mary's appetite.

		NORMAN
	I'm sorry. I wish... people could
	apologize for other people.

		MARY
	Don't worry about it.
		(a warm smile)
	But as long as you've made us supper,
	we may as well eat it. Huh?

She begins to back into her room. Norman starts to follow,
hesitates as he sees the total picture of an attractive young
woman and a motel room. Bringing down the tray of food, in
defiance of his mother's orders, is about the limit of his
defiance for one day. He cannot go into Mary's room.

		NORMAN
	It might be nicer... warmer in the
	office.

Without waiting for approval or disapproval, he turns, hurries
to the office. Mary looks after him, her face showing amused
sympathy, then follows.

INT. THE MOTEL OFFICE - (NIGHT)

Norman looks about, tray in hand, sees there is no reasonable
place to spread out a supper. He turns, sees Mary standing
in the doorway.

		NORMAN
	Eating in an office...
		(a rueful smile)
	...to officious, even for me. I have
	the parlor behind this... if you'd
	like.

Mary nods. Norman walks on, behind the counter and into the
darkened parlor. Mary follows.

INT. NORMAN'S PARLOR -(NIGHT)

In the darkened room, lit only by the light from the office
spilling in, we see Norman placing the tray on a table. Mary
comes to the doorway, pauses. Norman straightens up, goes to
lamp, turns on the light.

Mary is startled by the room. Even in the dimness of one
lamp, the strange, extraordinary nature of the room rushes
up at one. It is a room of birds. Stuffed birds, all over
the room, on every available surface, one even clinging to
the old fashioned fringed shade of the lamp. The birds are
of many varieties, beautiful, grand, horrible, preying. Mary
stares in awe and a certain fascinated horror.

CLOSE UP - THE VARIOUS BIRDS TWO SHOT - MARY AND NORMAN

		NORMAN
	Please sit down. On the sofa.

As Norman goes about spreading out the bread and ham and
pouring the milk, we follow Mary across the room. She studies
the birds as she walks, briefly examines a bookcase stacked
with books on the subject of "Taxidermy."

CLOSE UP - THE BOOKS ON TAXIDERMY MED. CLOSE SHOT - MARY

She notices, too, the paintings on the wall; nudes, primarily,
and many with a vaguely religious overtone.

Finally Mary reaches the sofa, sits down, looks at the spread.

		MARY
	You're very... kind.

		NORMAN
	It's all for you. I'm not hungry.
	Please go ahead.

Mary begins to eat, her attitude a bit tense. She takes up a
small slice of ham, bites off a tiny bite, nibbles at it in
the manner of one disturbed and preoccupied.

Norman gazes at her, at the tiny bite she has taken, smiles
and then laughs.

		NORMAN
	You eat like a bird.

		MARY
	You'd know, of course.

		NORMAN
	Not really. I hear that expression,
	that one eats "like a bird," is really
	a falsie, I mean a falsity, because
	birds eat a tremendous lot.
		(A pause, then
		explaining)
	Oh, I don't know anything about birds.
	My hobby is stuffing things...
	taxidermy. And I guess I'd just rather
	stuff birds because...  well, I hate
	the look of beasts when they're
	stuffed, foxes and chimps and all...
	some people even stuff dogs and
	cats... but I can't... I think only
	birds look well stuffed because
	they're rather...  passive, to begin
	with... most of them...

He trails off, his exuberance failing in the rushing return
of his natural hesitancy and discomfort. Mary looks at him,
with some compression, smiles.

		MARY
	It's a strange hobby. Curious, I
	mean.

		NORMAN
	Uncommon, too.

		MARY
	I imagine so.

		NORMAN
	It's not as expensive as you'd think.
	Cheap, really. Needles, thread,
	sawdust .. the chemicals are all
	that cost anything.
		(He goes quiet, looks
		disturbed)

		MARY
	A man should have a hobby.

		NORMAN
	It's more than a hobby... sometimes...
	a hobby is supposed to pass the time,
	not fill it.

		MARY
		(after a pause, softly)
	Is your time so empty?

		NORMAN
	Oh, no!
		(forcing brightness
		again)
	I run the office, tend the cabins
	and grounds, do little chores for
	mother... the ones she allows I might
	be capable of doing.

		MARY
	You go out... with friends?

		NORMAN
	Friends? Who needs friends.
		(Laughs, then with
		gallows humor)
	A boy's best friend is his mother.
		(Stops laughing)
	You've never had an empty moment in
	your whole life. Have you?

		MARY
	Only my share.

		NORMAN
	Where are you going? I don't mean to
	pry...

		MARY
		(A wistful smile)
	I'm looking for a private island.

		NORMAN
	What are you running away from?

		MARY
		(Alert)
	Why do you ask that?

		NORMAN
	No. People never run away from
	anything.
		(A pause)
	The rain didn't last very long.
		(Turning suddenly)
	You know what I think? I think we're
	all in our private traps, clamped in
	them, and none of us can ever climb
	out. We scratch and claw... but only
	at the air, only at each other, and
	for all of it, we never budge an
	inch.

		MARY
	Sometimes we deliberately step into
	those traps.

		NORMAN
	I was born in mine. I don't mind it
	anymore.

		MARY
	You should... mind it.

		NORMAN
	Oh I do... but I say I don't.
		(Laughs boyishly)

		MARY
		(Staring at him,
		shaking her head
		softly.)
	If anyone ever spoke to me, the way
	I heard... The way she spoke to you,
	I don't think I could ever laugh
	again.

		NORMAN
		(Controlled resentment)
	Sometimes when she talks that way to
	me I'd like to... curse her out and
	leave her forever!
		(A rueful smile)
	Or at least, defy her.
		(A pause, a hopeless
		shrug)
	But I couldn't. She's ill.

		MARY
	She sounded strong...

		NORMAN
	I mean... ill.
		(A pause)
	She had to raise me all by herself
	after my dad died... I was only
	five... and it must have been a
	strain. Oh, she didn't have to go
	out to work or anything, Dad left us
	with a little something... anyway, a
	few years ago... Mother met a man.
	He talked her into building this
	motel... We could have talked her
	into anything... and when.  Well...
	It was just too much for her when he
	died, too... And the way he died...
	Oh, it's nothing to talk about when
	you're eating.
		(Pauses, smiles)
	Anyway, it was too much of a loss
	for my mother... she had nothing
	left.

		MARY
		(Critically)
	Except you.

		NORMAN
	A son is a poor substitute for a
	lover.
		(Turns away as if in
		distaste of the word)

		MARY
	Why don't you go away?

		NORMAN
	To a private island, like you?

		MARY
	No, not like me.

		NORMAN
	It's too late for me. And besides...
	who'd look after her? She'd be alone
	up there, the fire would go out...
	damp and cold, like a grave. When
	you love someone, you don't do that
	to them, even if you hate them. Oh,
	I don't hate her.  I hate... what
	she's become. I hate... the illness.

		MARY
		(Slowly, carefully)
	Wouldn't it be better if you put her
	in... someplace...

She hesitates. Norman turns, slowly, looking at her with a
striking coldness.

		NORMAN
	An Institution? A madhouse?  People
	always call a madhouse "someplace."
		(Mimicing coldly)
	Put her in Someplace!

		MARY
	I'm sorry... I didn't mean it to
	sound uncaring...

		NORMAN
		(The coldness turning
		to tight fury)
	What do you mean about caring?  Have
	you ever seen one of those places?
	Inside? Laughing and tears and cruel
	eyes studying you... and my mother
	there?  Why? has she harmed you?
	She's as harmless as... one of these
	stuffed birds.

		MARY
	I am sorry. I only felt... it seemed
	she was harming you. I meant...

		NORMAN
		(High fury now)
	Well? You meant well?  People always
	mean well, they cluck their thick
	tongues and shake their heads and
	suggest so very delicately that...

The fury suddenly dies, abruptly and completely, and he sinks
back into his chair. There is a brief silence.

Mary watches the troubled man, is almost physically pained
by his anguish.

		NORMAN
		(Quietly)
	I've suggested it myself. But I hate
	to even think such a thing.  She
	needs me... and it isn't...
		(Looks up with a
		childlike pleading
		in his eyes)
	...it isn't as if she were a maniac,
	a raving thing... it's just that...
	sometimes she goes a little mad. We
	all go a little mad sometimes. Haven't
	you?

		MARY
		(After a long
		thoughtful pause)
	Yes, and just one time can be enough.
		(Rises)
	Thank you.

		NORMAN
		(Cheerfully, correcting)
	Thank you, Norman.

		MARY
	Norman.

		NORMAN
	You're not going to... to your room
	already?

		MARY
	I'm very tired. And I'll have a long
	drive tomorrow. All the way back to
	Phoenix.

		NORMAN
	Phoenix?

		MARY
	I stepped into a private trap back
	there -- and I want to go back and...
	try to pull myself out.
		(Looking close at
		Norman)
	Before it's too late for me, too.

		NORMAN
		(Looking at her)
	Why don't you stay a little while,
	just for talking.

		MARY
	I'd like to, but...

		NORMAN
	Alright. I'll see you in the morning.
	I'll bring you breakfast.  What time
	will you...

		MARY
	Very early. Dawn.

		NORMAN
	Alright, Miss...
		(He has forgotten her
		name)

		MARY
	Crane.

		NORMAN
	That's it.
		(He frowns, as if
		bothered by not being
		able to match the
		name to the memory
		of the name in the
		registration book)

		MARY
	Good night.

She goes out of the parlor. We see her, from Norman's
viewpoint, as she crosses the small office, goes out into
the night. Norman turns and looks at the table, and we see
his face now. It is bright with that drunken-like look of
determination and encouragement and like resolve. He starts
to clean up the table, pauses as he hears the closing of
Mary's door in the cabin next door.

He holds still, listens. He goes into the office and looks
at the book.

C.U. - THE NAME "SAMUELS"

M.S. - NORMAN

He goes back into the parlor with a mystified expression.
The sound of Mary moving about her room come over, soft
SOUNDS, somehow intimate in the night quiet. Norman turns
his ear from the direction of the SOUNDS, seems to be fighting
an impulse to listen, or more than listen.

But slowly, he is forced to surrender to the impulse and,
resisting himself, he goes to the wall, presses the side of
his head against it. The SOUNDS come louder, as if we too
had our ear pressed against the wall. Now Norman looks at a
picture hanging on the far end of the wall he is leaning
against. Slowly he starts toward it.

He reaches it, touches it, reluctantly lifts the small frame
off the wall.

A tiny circle of light hits Norman's face, coming from the
hole in the wall behind the picture. This end of the room is
very dim and thus we are able to see clearly the light
striking Norman's face.

We move close to Norman, extremely close, until his profile
fills the screen. The tiny spot of light hits his eye. See
the small hole through which the light comes. Norman peeps
through.

NORMAN'S VIEWPOINT

Through the hole we look into Mary's cabin, see Mary
undressing. She is in her bra and halfslip. She stoops over
a bit, places her hands behind her upper back, begins to
unhook her bra.

NORMAN - ECU

He watches as Mary removes her bra. We see his eye run up
and down the unseen figure of Mary.

NORMAN'S VIEWPOINT

Mary, just slipping into a robe, covering her complete nudity.

NORMAN

He turns from the hole, faces us for a moment, continues
turning until he can look out the small parlor window.

We see, as he sees...

THE HOUSE IN THE BACKGROUND

NORMAN

He turns his face away, quickly, resentfully. In his face we
see anger and anguish. And then resolve.

Quickly, precisely, he rehangs the picture over the hole in
the wall, turns, starts out of the parlor. We see him go
through the office and out onto the porch, not even bothering
to close the door behind him.

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE MOTEL OFFICE PORCH - (NIGHT)

Norman walking along the porch, in the direction of the big
house. Once on the path he pauses, looks up at the light in
the bedroom window, then pulls himself up, squares his
shoulders, strides manfully up the path.

CAMERA follows behind him. He opens the door of the house,
enters. We see him pause at the foot of the stairway, look
up at the bedroom door just at the head of the stair. He
holds for a moment, and then his resolve and courage
evaporates. His shoulders slump, sadly, mournfully. He by-
passes the stairs and slowly makes his way to the kitchen.
At the far end of the hall. He enters the kitchen, drops
wearily into a chair. After a moment, he stretches out a leg
and gently pushes the kitchen door closed.

						CUT TO:

INT. MARY'S MOTEL ROOM - (NIGHT)

Mary is seated at the small desk, engrossed in figuring in a
small notebook. We see from these figures a calculation which
indicates her intention to make a restitution of the money
she has used of the forty thousand dollars. We see, too, her
bankbook. The paper reads thus: top figure, 40,000; directly
beneath it 500, the amount used for the new car; total after
subtraction, 39,500. In another spot we see a figure which
matches the balance in her bankbook; 624.00.

Beneath this is the figure 500, and the amount after
subtraction, 124.00. She studies the figures, sighs, not
wearily but with a certain satisfaction, with the pleasure
that comes when one knows that at any cost one is going to
continue doing the right thing. After a moment she tears the
page out of the notebook and, rising, begins to rip it into
small pieces. She goes into the bathroom, drops the pieces
into the toilet bowl, flushes the toilet. Then she drops her
robe and steps into the tub and turns the shower on.

INT. MARY IN SHOWER

Over the bar on which hangs the shower curtain, we can see
the bathroom door, not entirely closed. For a moment we watch
Mary as she washes and soaps herself.

There is still a small worry in her eyes, but generally she
looks somewhat relieved.

Now we see the bathroom door being pushed slowly open.

The noise of the shower drowns out any sound. The door is
then slowly and carefully closed.

And we see the shadow of a woman fall across the shower
curtain. Mary's back is turned to the curtain. The white
brightness of the bathroom is almost blinding.

Suddenly we see the hand reach up, grasp the shower curtain,
rip it aside.

						CUT TO:

MARY - ECU

As she turns in response to the feel and SOUND of the shower
curtain being torn aside. A look of pure horror erupts in
her face. A low terrible groan begins to rise up out of her
throat. A hand comes into the shot. The hand holds an enormous
bread knife. The flint of the blade shatters the screen to
an almost total, silver blankness.

THE SLASHING

An impression of a knife slashing, as if tearing at the very
screen, ripping the film. Over it the brief gulps of
screaming. And then silence. And then the dreadful thump as
Mary's body falls in the tub.

REVERSE ANGLE

The blank whiteness, the blur of the shower water, the hand
pulling the shower curtain back. We catch one flicker of a
glimpse of the murderer. A woman, her face contorted with
madness, her head wild with hair, as if she were wearing a
fright-wig.  And then we see only the curtain, closed across
the tub, and hear the rush of the shower water. Above the
shower-bar we see the bathroom door open again and after a
moment we HEAR the SOUND of the front door slamming.

						CUT TO:

THE DEAD BODY

Lying half in, half out of the tub, the head tumbled over,
touching the floor, the hair wet, one eye wide open as if
popped, one arm lying limp and wet along the tile floor.
Coming down the side of the tub, running thick and dark along
the porcelain, we see many small threads of blood. CAMERA
FOLLOWS away from the body, travels slowly across the
bathroom, past the toilet, out into the bedroom. As CAMERA
approaches the bed, we see the folded newspaper as Mary placed
it on the bedside table.

CLOSE UP - THE NEWSPAPER

beside the bed. The CAMERA now moves away over to the window
and looks up to the house, and as it gets there we HEAR,
coming from within the house, the SOUND of Norman's fearful,
shocked voice.

		NORMAN'S VOICE
	Mother! Oh God, what... blood,
	blood... mother...!

We cannot entirely distinguish these exclamations.

After a moment or two of silence, Norman emerges from the
front door, dashes down the path toward the motel.

				   QUICK CUT TO:

EXT. THE PATH - (NIGHT)

Norman is coming AT CAMERA, running head-on. He dashes into
an extreme close up and we see the terror and fear ripe in
his face. CAMERA PANS as Norman races past, holds as Norman
runs to the porch and quickly along it and directly to Mary's
room.

INT. MARY'S CABIN - (NIGHT)

Norman pauses a moment in the doorway, glances about the
room, hears the shower going, sees the bathroom door is open.
He goes to the bathroom, looks in, sees the body.

Slowly, almost carefully, he raises his hands to his face,
covers his eyes, turns his face away. Then he crosses to the
window, looks out at the house. Shot is so angled that we
see the bedside table with the newspaper on it.

After a moment, Norman moves from the window, sinks onto the
edge of the bed.

FRESH ANGLE - BEHIND NORMAN

Norman sitting on bed, the bathroom in b.g. of shot. We can
see only the hand of the dead girl, lying along the tile
floor. Norman presses his eyes, fights to find a way out of
his dilemma. Slowly, a kind of settling comes upon him, the
peace that comes with decision.

Norman rises, goes to the window, looks out, and then, with
resolution, closes the window and draws the curtain across
it. Then he crosses to the front window, facing the porch,
and draws those curtains closed. Then he switches off the
bedroom light, leaving the room lit only by the spill from
the bathroom. He opens the front door, goes out.

EXT. THE HOTEL PORCH - (NIGHT)

Norman comes out of Mary's cabin, closes the door carefully
behind him, goes along the porch to his office, goes in. We
stay outside. Immediately, the "Vacancy" sign goes off, and
then the motel sign goes off. As CAMERA GOES closer to the
office, the lights within go off and we HEAR a closet door
opening and then the SOUND of a pail being picked up. Norman
comes out of office, closes door, looks cautiously about,
goes along porch, carrying pail with mop in it, goes into
Mary's cabin, closing the door after him.

INT. MARY'S CABIN

With the paper in the foreground, Norman enters. We can see
him in the dim spill of light. He pauses by the door, then
gathers his strength and goes into the bathroom. We HEAR him
set the pail on the tiled floor, and then we HEAR the shower
being turned off. And there is total silence. CAMERA MOVES
FORWARD so that we can see into bathroom.

CAMERA is ANGLED that we see Norman only from the waist up.
Quickly and deftly he unhooks the shower curtain, emerges
with it into the bedroom. CAMERA PANS down and we see him
spread the shower curtain on the bedroom floor, just outside
the bathroom door. He spreads the curtain so that one end of
it comes up against the bathroom threshold and slightly over
and onto the tile floor. Again he goes into the bathroom and
CAMERA TILTS up so that we see only the upper half of Norman.
He works carefully, with his arms extended away from his
body, slowly pulls the dead body out of the tub, drags it
across the tile floor and onto the spread-out shower curtain
in the bedroom. Having arranged the body, he straightens up,
examines his hands, sees bloodstains on them. He returns to
the bathroom, goes to the hand-basin.

CLOSE SHOT

We see his hands being washed, see the bloodstains being
diluted and washed away by the gush of the faucet water.

NORMAN

We see Norman shake his hands free of the water, then turn
to the job of cleaning the bathroom.

He places the pail in the tub, runs water into it, dips the
mop in, swabs the tile floor. With a towel he wipes off the
wall over the tub and the edges and sides of the tub and
even the shower curtain rod. Then he takes a second towel
and goes over the cleaned areas, carefully drying them.
Finally he rinses and squeezes out the mop, empties the pail,
cleans out the tub, and goes out into the bedroom.

INT. MARY'S BEDROOM

Norman steps carefully around the unseen body, crosses to
the desk, starts going through Mary's handbag, in search of
her car keys. He suddenly notices them lying on the desk,
where he'd thrown them after parking her car. He picks up
the keys, crosses the room, goes out.

EXT. THE PORCH

We see Norman pauses at the door, check cautiously, then
hurry across the porch and into Mary's car. He circle-turns
the car, so that its trunk is backed up to the turns porch,
directly opposite Mary's door, as close as it can go.

Then he alights, goes to the trunk, opens it with the key
and, leaving the trunk lid raised, goes back into the cabin.

INT. MARY'S ROOM

From a raised angle, we see Norman bend down and begin to
wrap the shower curtain around the body. We see the edges of
the curtain as they are raised and laid down again. Then he
picks up the wrapped body, crosses to the door, uses his
foot to pull the door open, and, leaving the door open behind
him, goes quickly across the porch and gently lays the body
in the trunk. He closes the lid then, but does not lock it.
He comes back into the cabin, closes the door completely,
flicks on the light.

Again the newspaper is in the foreground. For a moment he
pauses, closes his eyes against the realization of what he
is doing, then quickly pushes all thoughts away, continues
with his work. With the room lighted, he now proceeds to
gather up all Mary's articles and toss them into the suitcase.
He checks all drawers and the closet, gets down and checks
under bed and bureau, goes into the bathroom, checks that
room again, comes back into the bedroom, looks about
carefully, spots Mary's handbag, throws even that into the
suitcase, is finally satisfied that all traces of the girl
are gone from the room. Then he closes Mary's suitcase, picks
it up.

With his free hand he picks up the pail, in which are the
mop and the used towels. He crosses to the door, switches
off the light with his shoulder, pulls open the door, starts
out.

EXT. THE PORCH

As Norman stands in the doorway, he is suddenly and blindingly
lit by the bright headlights of a passing car. The flash of
the lights and the SOUND of the SPEEDING CAR are over in a
flicker of a moment, but it takes a few seconds for Norman
to regain his former tense composure. Then he goes to the
car trunk, raises it with his foot, throws the suitcase and
the pail into it, slams it shut. He pauses a moment, then
realizes he has left the bathroom light on in Mary's cabin.
He returns to cabin. As he enters, his eye is caught by the
newspaper on the bedside table. He goes to it, takes the
newspaper, and looks once again into the bathroom. His glance
goes right over the toilet bowl.

He turns out the lights, crosses the darkened cabin, goes
out onto the porch.

He reopens the trunk, tosses in the newspaper and closes it.
He goes around and jumps into the car and starts away.

We HOLD on the trunk, follow it for a while, then

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. THE SWAMP - (NIGHT)

The car pulls away from a CLOSE ANGLE on the trunk and as
CAMERA HOLDS we see that we are now in a swamp area.

It is quiet except for the irritating noises of night insects.
Norman stops the car at the very edge of the swamp, turns
off the lights, gets out, leaving door open. He looks at the
swamp, seems doubtful of its ability to swallow up the car,
realizes he has no choice. He leans into the car, releases
the emergency brake, starts to push. The front of the car
begins to roll into the swamp. Suddenly there is the LOW,
THROBBING SOUND of a motor. Norman freezes, listens.

The SOUND grows louder and Norman realizes it is an airplane
flying overhead. The car is rolling quickly now. Norman jumps
away, slams the door shut, stands tense. The SOUND of the
plane overhead grows louder.

Norman looks up.

NORMAN'S VIEWPOINT - THE BLACK SKY

We see no plane. The SOUND of the motor is beginning to
diminish.

				    CUT BACK TO:

NORMAN

We see the relief in his face. He looks at the car.

More than two-thirds of it have already sunk into the swamp.
The trunk alone seems to hold poised above the sand and slime,
as if refusing to go the rest of the way. Norman begins to
panic, he steps dangerously close, pushes with his foot. And
slowly the car sinks, until finally it is gone and we hear
only the gentle plop of the swamp's final gulp, and see only
the small after-bubble, like a visual burp.

Norman waits a moment, then begins stamping out the tire
marks, so obvious in the wet ground around the swamp.

He stamps and drags his feet over the markings as we:

				    DISSOLVE TO:

CLOSE UP NORMAN

standing on the porch of the motel, leaning against a post.
He is staring out into the night, a look of guarded, casual
innocence on his face, as if he were taking one last moment
of peaceful night air before retiring. Then he glances down
and CAMERA follows his gaze. A hose is lying on the ground
outside Mary's cabin, its stream of water obliterating the
tire marks.

After a moment, Norman's hand comes into shot, picks up hose,
places it in a new position. As CAMERA PULLS BACK, we see
that the water from the hose has erased and rearranged the
road markings so that it would be impossible to tell that a
car had been parked here.

After a short wait, Norman goes to the hose-faucet, turns it
off, unscrews the hose. As he rolls the hose, he walks away
from the spot, past the office, heading for the path that
leads to the house. He goes up the path, pauses at the steps
of the house, tosses the curled hose onto the lawn, goes up
the steps and into the house. CAMERA FOLLOWS him in, PAUSES
as he pauses at the foot of the stairs. Norman goes up the
stairs.

On the landing he stops. The door to his mother's room is
closed. Lying in a heap outside the door are a blood-stained
dress and a pair of elderly-woman's shoes. From an EXTREMELY
HIGH ANGLE, we look down on Norman as he bends to pick up
the stained dress and shoes.

He rolls the shoes into the dress, tucks the small, neat
bundle under his arm, and starts down the stairs, heading
for the basement.

EXT. A LONG SHOT OF THE OLD HOUSE - (NIGHT)

It stands silhouetted against the sky. There is a long wait.
Then, slowly, a curl of smoke comes out of the chimney.

				       FADE OUT:

						FADE IN

INT. BACK ROOM OF SAM'S HARDWARE STORE IN FAIRVALE - (DAY)

Sam is seated at his desk, writing a letter. Sequence

begins with CAMERA IN CLOSE, over Sam's shoulder, and we can
read as mush as he has written of the letter. The letterhead
reads "Sam Loomis - Hardware," and the letter reads: "Dearest
right-as-always Mary: I'm sitting in this tiny back room
which isn't big enough for both of us, and suddenly it looks
big enough for both of us. So what if we're poor and cramped
and miserable, at least we'll be happy! If you haven't come
to your senses, and still want to...

CAMERA begins PULLING AWAY as Sam turns the sheet of paper
over, continues backing away out of the small back room and
heads, backwards, down the corridor, we see a young clerk,
BOB SUMMERFIELD, Sam's assistant, standing behind the counter,
a look of handsome patience on his face. He is waiting on a
meticulous, elderly woman customer, who is holding and
examining a large can of insecticide. As CAMERA PASSES:

		WOMAN CUSTOMER
	...They tell you what its ingredients
	are and how it's guaranteed to
	exterminate any insect in the world,
	but they do not tell you whether or
	not it's painless. And I say insect
	or man, death should always be
	painless.

CAMERA, by this has reached the front door of the hardware
store and we now see a girl standing just inside the door.
She is an attractive girl with a rather definite manner, a
look of purposefulness. She carries a handbag and a small
overnight case. She is Mary's sister, LILA CRANE.

Bob Summerfield has noticed Lila, smiles brightly at her,
gives her an I'll-be-with-you-in-a-moment nod.

Lila starts to walk toward the counter, never taking her
eyes off Bob. As she approaches, she asks quietly:

		LILA
	Sam?

		SUMMERFIELD
	You want to see Sam?

		LILA
	Sam Loomis.

		SUMMERFIELD
		(yelling toward back
		room)
	Sam! Lady wants to see you!

Lila looks to the back room. The woman customer goes on
worriedly examining the fine print of the insecticide can.
Sam comes to the door of his room, pauses, looks at Lila a
moment, starts toward her, his expression indicating that he
does not know her. Lila studies him with a quiet, worried
expression.

		SAM
	Yes?

		LILA
	May I talk to you?

		SAM
		(a bit mystified)
	Sure...

Lila glances at the customer and the clerk, turns, starts
toward the front of the store. Sam holds a moment, then
follows. As he reaches her, she turns, her eyes studying him
intently as she says:

		LILA
	I'm Mary's sister.

		SAM
	Lila.

		LILA
		(quickly)
	Is Mary here?

Sam is mystified, and is also aware of the worried, hostile
expression on Lila's face. He studies her for a quiet moment.
Behind them is a display of various size carving knives.

		SAM
	Is something wrong?

		LILA
	I want to know if my sister is here.

		SAM
	Here?

		LILA
	With you.

		SAM
	Where?

		LILA
	I don't know where. In your store,
	somewhere in your town... anywhere.

		SAM
	What's the matter?

		LILA
	Don't you know?

As Sam is about to speak, the Woman Customer comes sailing
past, speaking as she goes and wearing a satisfied smile.

		WOMAN CUSTOMER
	All I can do is hope if it isn't
	painless, it's quick!

She speaks "quick" with a kind of delicious bite, nods
happily, goes on out of the store. Sam is now staring
apprehensively at Lila.

		SAM
	What should I know?

		LILA
	To begin with, where Mary is. Do
	you?

		SAM
	No. I take it you don't either?
		(As Lila shakes her
		head)
	How long?

		LILA
	Last Friday. She left work, and
	home... I was in Tucson over the
	weekend... I haven't heard from her,
	not even a phone call.

		SAM
	And you thought she'd come up here,
	to me? If she had, what reason would
	she have for not calling you?

		LILA
	A good reason, I suppose.

		SAM
		(Slightly exasperated)
	Well what do you think, we eloped or
	something? Or we're living in sin
	and...

		LILA
	Mr. Loomis, you're so busy being
	defensive that you haven't even
	reacted to the most serious fact of
	all. Mary is missing.

		SAM
	I was getting to that!

		LILA
	What do you know about it?

		SAM
	Nothing! You're putting me on the
	defensive.

		LILA
	Look, if you two are in this thing
	together, I don't care, it's none of
	my business... But I want to see
	Mary. I want her to tell me she's
	all right and it's none of my
	business. Then I'll go back to Phoenix
	and...

She stops, the anxiety and fear building up in her, her eyes
beginning to fill with worried tears. Sam studies her for a
moment, then turns and calls:

		SAM
	Bob? Run out and get yourself some
	lunch.

		SUMMERFIELD
	It's okay, Sam, I brought it with
	me.

		SAM
	Run out and eat it.

Bob gets the message, goes out through the back way.

Sam goes closer to Lila, speaks with soft seriousness.

		SAM
	What thing?

		LILA
	Huh?

		SAM
	What thing could we be in together?

		LILA
		(A pause)
	I hate tears.
		(Takes out hankie)

		SAM
	Is Mary... in trouble?

		LILA
	Yes.

		SAM
	Well why didn't she come to me...
	call me...?

		LILA
	Not that kind...
		(Almost a smile)
	You men and your egos.

		SAM
		(Seriously)
	Never mind my ego. Let's talk about
	Mary.

Their attention is distracted by a man who has strolled
quietly into the room. He ignores them, walks past them,
goes behind the counter, takes down a sign reading "CLOSED
FOR LUNCH," walks back to the door, closes door, hangs the
sign across the door window, locks the door, turns to Sam
and Lila, folds his arms, smiles a particularly unfriendly
smile.

		ARBOGAST
	Let's all talk about Mary.

		SAM
	Who are you, friend?

		ARBOGAST
	Milt Arbogast, Private Investigator.
		(To Lila)
	Where is she, Miss Crane?

		LILA
	I don't know.

		ARBOGAST
	Wouldn't have been able to tail you
	if you did.

		SAM
	What's your interest?

		ARBOGAST
	Money.

There is a moment's silence and then, unable to tolerate the
sudden frightening happenings, Sam explodes.

		SAM
	Somebody better tell me what's going
	on and tell me fast! I can take so
	much and then...

		ARBOGAST
		(Interrupting calmly)
	Your girl friend stole forty thousand
	dollars.

Sam looks at Arbogast in utter shock and in that state asks
one of those seemingly ridiculous questions.

		SAM
	Why?

		ARBOGAST
		(An almost amused
		smile)
	Must've needed it.

		SAM
	What are you talking about?
		(To Lila)
	What is this?

		LILA
	She was supposed to bank it, on
	Friday, for her boss. She didn't.

And no one has seen her since.

		ARBOGAST
		(Looking at Sam)
	Someone has seen her. Someone always
	sees a girl with forty thousand
	dollars.
		(To Sam)
	She is your girl friend, isn't she?

		LILA
	Sam, they don't want to prosecute,
	they just want the money back. It
	was all in cash...

		ARBOGAST
		(Correcting with
		Cassidy's word)
	Casharoonie!

		LILA
	Sam, if she's here...

		SAM
	She isn't!

A real look of anguish comes into Lila's face. And Arbogast
studies it, then speaks.

		ARBOGAST
	You came up here on a hunch, Miss
	Crane? Nothing more? No phone call...
	from him, or from your sister herself?

		LILA
		(wearily)
	Not even a hunch. Just hope.

		ARBOGAST
	With a little checking, I could get
	to believe you.

		LILA
		(anxiously)
	I don't care if you do or... I want
	to see Mary... before she gets in
	any deeper...

		SAM
	Did you check in Phoenix...
	hospitals... maybe she had an
	accident... a hold-up...

		ARBOGAST
	She was seen leaving town in her
	car. Seen by her very victims, I
	might add.

		SAM
		(after a moment)
	I don't believe it.
		(to Lila, slowly)
	Do you?

		LILA
		(a thoughtful pause)
	Yes... I just... did. The moment
	they told me...

		SAM
	You might have doubted for say five
	minutes or so, Sister.

Lila turns from Sam, a flush of guilt and regret in her face.
Arbogast looks at her, quiet sympathetically.

		ARBOGAST
	We're always quickest to doubt people
	who have a record for being honest.
	I think she's here, Miss Crane. Where
	there's a boyfriend...
		(Trails off, smiles
		encouragingly)
	She won't be back there among the
	nuts and bolts... but she'll be in
	this town... somewhere. I'll find
	her.

He nods, takes down the closed-for-lunch sign, sails it to
the counter, opens door, goes out into the street.

After a quiet moment:

		LILA
	I just listened... and believed
	everything they told me. 'She stole
	the money.' 'We don't want to get
	her in trouble.' 'No don't bring the
	police in'...

		SAM
	It was her boss' idea not to report
	it to the police?

		LILA
	No. The man whose money she... he
	talked so loud and fast, and I... I
	should've called the police.

		SAM
	He must have had a darn good reason
	for wanting them kept out of it...
	All that cash...

		LILA
	I ought to call the police right
	now!

		SAM
	No.

		LILA
	Why not? Sam, is she hiding here?
	Are you two planning to go away with
	the money?

		SAM
	How could I go away? I'm in debt up
	to my...
		(Smiles at the
		incongruity of his
		reply, then goes
		serious)
	If she did steal that money...  It's
	hard to believe she did because it's
	hard to see why she would. Unless
	she had some wild idea that it would
	help me... us...

		LILA
	She haven't even called you?

		SAM
	I didn't see her... and I didn't
	hear from her! Believe that!

		LILA
	I need to... I need to believe
	something. This is the first time
	I've ever come up against anything I
	couldn't... understand.

		SAM
	You've led a charmed life.

		LILA
	No. I just think... anything can be
	explained. But Mary, doing a thing
	like this... I don't know how to
	handle...

		SAM
	Maybe we can handle it together.
		(He smiles
		encouragingly)

		LILA
		(A rueful shrug)
	I came flying up here expecting to
	get some explanation... for all I
	know, she may be trying to get in
	touch with me, at home. I'd better
	go home.

		SAM
		(A thoughtful pause)
	I think she'll contact me if she
	contacts anybody. Why don't you stay
	here. When she shows up... or calls...
	be here.

		LILA
		(A long study, her
		suspicion of him
		evaporating)
	You want me to stay here?

		SAM
	She'll need both of us.

		LILA
		(considers, then:)
	Where... can I stay?

		SAM
		(brightly)
	First rate hotel, fifty yards up the
	street. Come on.
		(as he reaches for
		the closed-for-lunch
		sign)
	After we check you in we'll go to
	the drugstore and get you a sandwich.
	Then we'll come back here... and
	wait.

He hangs the sign on the door, ushers Lila out, closes door
behind him.

						CUT TO:

EXT. STREET - (DAY)

They emerge from the store and walk along to the hotel.  As
they enter, Arbogast is in the act of taking over a white
Ford sedan from a rental car man. They glance at him and he
returns a cynical look.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. HOTEL - (DAY)

Outside another hotel we see Arbogast alight from the white
car and go into new hotel.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. COUNTRYSIDE - (DAY)

The white car speeding along the highway.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. NEW MOTEL - (DAY)

Arbogast going into the office - we see the sign above him.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (DAY)

A high shot showing the freeway and Bates house and motel on
the side old highway. A pause and then across the bottom of
the picture a white car speeds by on the freeway.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. HOTEL - (DUSK)

Another Hotel. Arbogast goes in.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (DAY)

The white car speeding along the freeway again going in the
opposite direction to last time. Norman, a tiny figure, is
seen going up the steps to his mother's house.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BOARDING HOUSE - (DAY)

Arbogast's search is getting down in the scale. This is an
entrance to a cheesy boarding house. "Rooms to Rent," etc.
He looks at his list and then goes in.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (DAY)

The white car goes by on the freeway again.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. ROOMING HOUSE - (DAY)

Arbogast goes in.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (TWILIGHT)

Heavy traffic on the freeway. A beat or two - again the white
car. It slows up opposite the distant motel. It makes a turn
and goes back out of scene. A pause and it reappears on the
old road and slowly makes its way toward the Bates' Motel.

EXT. THE BATES' HOUSE AND MOTEL - (TWILIGHT)

We now see Norman. He has brought out an old rocking chair
and has placed it on the office porch and is sitting hunched
in it. And he is darning one of his own socks. CAMERA HOLDS.
Beyond the porch, and Norman, we see the old house and can
barely make out, in the twilight dimness, the figure of his
mother seated at the window. Here, too, there is that quality
of quiet peace surrounded by a vague foreboding.

Now Norman looks up at the SOUND of the approaching car.

And continues looking as the car comes to a stop and Arbogast
gets out. Arbogast gives the place a quick once-over, gazes
at Norman, starts forward. In his steps and manner there is
that bored, routine-logged quality of a man who has seen too
many motels and asked question of too many hotel managers
over too short a period of time.

Norman rises as Arbogast comes forward.

		NORMAN
		(shoving sock in his
		pocket)
	I always forget to put the sign on,
	but we do have vacancy.
		(Cheerfully)
	Twelve in fact. Twelve cabins, twelve
	vacancies.

		ARBOGAST
		(pleasantly)
	In the past two days I've been to so
	many motels, my eyes are bleary with
	neon. This is the first one that
	looked like it was hiding from the
	world at large.

		NORMAN
	I don't really forget the sign, it
	just doesn't seem... any use.
		(Points)
	This used to be the main highway.
		(Starts for office)
	Want to register, please?

		ARBOGAST
	Sit down. I don't want to trouble
	you, just want to ask...

		NORMAN
	No trouble. Today's linen day. I
	change all the beds once a week,
	whether they've been used or not...
	dampness. I hate the smell of
	dampness.
		(Opening office door)
	It's such a dank smell.

Norman is holding the door open, so Arbogast walks in.

Norman follows.

INT. MOTEL OFFICE - (TWILIGHT)

Norman switches on the overhead light, starts for the linen
closet, suddenly pauses, turns, studies Arbogast, who has
remained standing by the door.

		NORMAN
	You out to buy a motel?

		ARBOGAST
	No.

		NORMAN
	Oh. I thought... you said you'd been
	to so many in two days...  What was
	it you wanted to ask?

		ARBOGAST
	I'm looking for a missing person.
		(takes out and opens
		wallet and extends
		it as he speaks)
	My name's Arbogast, private
	investigator...
		(takes back wallet
		when Norman doesn't
		look at it)
	Trying to trace a young girl who's
	been missing almost a week. From
	Phoenix.
		(A look at Norman's
		frightened expression)
	It's a private matter... family wants
	to forgive her...
		(smiles)
	She isn't in trouble.

		NORMAN
		(forcing a smile)
	I didn't think the police went
	searching for people who weren't in
	trouble.

		ARBOGAST
	I'm not the police.

		NORMAN
	Oh.

He waits a moment, then opens closet, starts counting out
sheets and pillow cases, keeps his back to Arbogast.

Arbogast takes a photograph out of his pocket, talks as he
crosses to Norman.

		ARBOGAST
	We have reason to believe she came
	this way... might have stopped in
	this area...
		(extends photograph,
		which Norman doesn't
		glance at)
	Did she stop here?

		NORMAN
	No. No one has stopped here in
	weeks...

		ARBOGAST
	Mind looking at the picture before
	committing yourself?

		NORMAN
	Committing myself to what? You sure
	talk like a Policeman.

		ARBOGAST
	Look at the picture. Please.

Norman glances, briefly, turns away, lifts sheets and pillow
cases off the shelf holds them close, almost protectively.

		NORMAN
	No. At least I don't recall.

		ARBOGAST
	She might have used an alias. Mary
	Crane's the real name, but she
	might've registered...

		NORMAN
		(interrupting)
	I don't even bother with guests
	registering any more... I mean, little
	by little, you drop the formalities.
		(more relaxed, because
		Arbogast is listening
		with a pleasant smile)
	I shouldn't even bother to change
	the linen. I guess habits die hard.
	Which reminds me...

He goes to the wall, flips a light switch.

		NORMAN
	The vacancy sign. Just in case.

We had a couple the other night, said if the sign hasn't
been on they'd have thought this was an old deserted mining
town or something.

		ARBOGAST
	Now there's a couple even remarking
	about your sign, and see how easily
	you forgot them?

		NORMAN
	What?

		ARBOGAST
	You thought no one has stopped here
	in weeks. Now, try to remember if
	this girl...

		ARBOGAST
		(A pause, a study)
	Maybe she even signed the register...
	because habits die hard. Let's check
	it, huh?

Norman says nothing. Arbogast goes to the desk, pulls the
registry book around, flips back a page or two.

Norman simply stares at the man. Arbogast hums faintly,
pleasantly, as he examines the pages. Then:

		ARBOGAST
	Yes sir! Marie Samuels.  Interesting
	alias.

He takes a slip of paper out of his pocket, lays it beside
the signature in the registry book, all the while nodding
and smiling nicely, as if this discovery will make Norman as
happy as it is making him.

		ARBOGAST
	Don't know where she got "Marie,"
	but "Samuels" figures. Her boy
	friend's name is Sam.
		(Turns to Norman, the
		smile gone)
	Was she in disguise? Or do you want
	to check the picture again?

		NORMAN
	I didn't lie to you. I just have
	trouble keeping track of... time.

Arbogast has reached him, the picture extended. Norman looks
dutifully at it.

		NORMAN
	It was raining and her hair didn't
	look like that... damped out, I guess.

		ARBOGAST
	Tell me all about her.

		NORMAN
	She arrived kind of late, wet and
	hungry and she was very tired and
	went right to bed and left early.

		ARBOGAST
	How early?

		NORMAN
	Very early. Dawn.

		ARBOGAST
	Of which morning?

		NORMAN
	The following morning. Sunday.

		ARBOGAST
	No one met her?

		NORMAN
	No.

		ARBOGAST
	Or arrived with her.

		NORMAN
	No.

		ARBOGAST
	She didn't call anyone? Even locally?

		NORMAN
	No.

		ARBOGAST
	You didn't spend the whole night
	with her did you?

		NORMAN
	No! Of all...

		ARBOGAST
	How do you know she didn't make a
	call?

		NORMAN
	She was tired. She said she had a
	long drive ahead of her, in the
	morning... Yes, now I'm remembering
	very clearly because I'm picturing.
	When you make a picture of the moment
	in your mind, you can remember every
	detail. She was sitting back there,
	no she was standing up, with some
	sandwich still in her hand, and she
	said she had to drive a long way.

		ARBOGAST
	Back where?

		NORMAN
	What do you mean?

		ARBOGAST
	You said she was sitting "back there,"
	or standing rather...

		NORMAN
	Oh. My private parlor. She had an
	awful hunger... so I made her some
	supper. And then she went to bed and
	left in the morning. I didn't even
	see her leave.

		ARBOGAST
	How did she pay you?

		NORMAN
	What?

		ARBOGAST
	Cash or check? For the cabin...

		NORMAN
	Cash.

		ARBOGAST
	And when she left, she never came
	back.

		NORMAN
	Why should she? I'm sorry, I have
	work to do, Mr... if you don't mind...

		ARBOGAST
	I do mind. If it don't jell, it ain't
	aspic!
		(smiles)
	This ain't jelling.

		NORMAN
	I don't know what you expect me to
	know about... people come and go...

		ARBOGAST
	She isn't still here, is she?

		NORMAN
	Not at all!

		ARBOGAST
	Suppose I wanted to search the cabins,
	all twelve... would I need a warrant?

		NORMAN
		(as if pleasantly
		exasperated)
	Look, if you won't believe me, go
	ahead. You can help me make beds if
	you like.
		(laughs, shakes his
		head)
	Come on.

He starts out. Arbogast pauses, momentarily confused by the
young man's openness.

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE MOTEL PORCH - (NIGHT)

Norman walks down the porch, hesitates before Cabin One,
walks on a bit toward Cabin Two, stops, turns to see if
Arbogast is following. Arbogast has come out onto the porch,
but is not following. He has walked to the opposite end of
the porch and is standing at its edge, looking up at the old
house. The upstairs window is in darkness. The neon of the
Vacancy and Motel signs splash strange light over the scene.

		NORMAN
	Change your mind?

Arbogast does not reply. Norman becomes apprehensive, starts
to Arbogast, forcing himself to remain calm and cheerful.

		NORMAN
	I guess I've got one of those faces
	you can't help believing.

		ARBOGAST
		(to Norman, but
		continuing to stare
		at the house)
	Anyone at home?

		NORMAN
	I live there. Alone.

		ARBOGAST
	Someone is sitting in that window.

		NORMAN
	My mother.

Arbogast turns, gazes seriously at him.

		NORMAN
	She's... ill. Confined to her room.
	It's practically living alone.

		ARBOGAST
		(after a pause)
	If this girl Mary Crane were here,
	you'd have no reason to hide her
	would you?

		NORMAN
	Of course not.

		ARBOGAST
	If she paid you well?

		NORMAN
	Now, look...!

		ARBOGAST
	Or if she had you say... gallantly
	protecting her... you wouldn't be
	fooled... you'd know she was just
	using you. Wouldn't you?

		NORMAN
	I'm not a fool! And I'm not capable
	of being fooled! Not even by women!

		ARBOGAST
	I didn't mean that as a slur on your
	manhood. I'm sorry.

		NORMAN
		(disturbed now)
	That's all right. maybe she could
	have fooled me.  But...
		(a rueful smile)
	She didn't fool my mother.

		ARBOGAST
	Your mother met her?
		(quickly)
	Can I talk to your mother?

		NORMAN
	No. I told you, she's confined...

		ARBOGAST
	Just for a moment. She might have
	picked up a hint you'd miss.

		ARBOGAST
	Sick old women are sharp. Come on, I
	won't disturb...

		NORMAN
	No! Just no!  I have one of those
	breaking points like any other man,
	believe it or not, and I'm near it.
	There's just so much pushing I can
	take and I think...

		ARBOGAST
	All right!
		(starts away, toward
		his car, pauses)
	Might save me a lot of leg-work if I
	could just talk to your mother.  But
	I'd need a warrant for that, won't
	I?

Norman does not respond. Arbogast gets in his car, starts
the motor. Norman looks up, studies the man's face, his own
face showing apprehension. Arbogast backs the car around
very slowly, his gaze divided between the old house and the
lighted window of Cabin Two. As he turns the car out, his
headlights light up the porch.

Norman stands, watching him drive away.

EXT. PHONE BOOTH - (NIGHT)

The car pulls up and Arbogast gets out of car, leaving motor
running. As he starts to walk across the highway, CAMERA
PULLS AWAY and we

						CUT TO:

EXT. HIGHWAY WITH TELEPHONE BOOTH - (NIGHT)

Arbogast gets to the phone booth, enters. CAMERA STARTS
FORWARD, and we see Arbogast remove a small notebook from
his pocket, check on a number, drop a dime in the slot and
dial this number. As we reach phone booth,

						CUT TO:

		ARBOGAST
		(into phone)
	Miss Crane, please.
		(listens)
	She leave a number?
		(listens)
	Thanks.
		(hangs up, dials again,
		waits)
	Lila there, Mr. Loomis? Arbogast.
		(waits)
	Lila? Look, this isn't much, but it
	might make you feel a little better.
	Mary was up here. Spent last Saturday
	night at Bates'  Motel, out here on
	the old highway.
		(listens)
	Young fellow runs it, said Mary spent
	the night, left, period!
		(listens)
	I did question him, believe me. I
	think I got all there was to get.
	Just have to try to pick up the scent
	from here.
		(listens)
	Well... maybe that's because I don't
	feel entirely satisfied.  He's got a
	sick old mother, confined type, and
	I think she saw Mary and talked to
	her. Shame, too... confined old women
	love to talk to strangers.
		(listens)
	I was, but I think I'll go back to
	the motel, first.
		(listens)
	No, you stay put, Lila. With Loomis.
	I should be back in an hour.
		(listens)
	All right. And Lila... You'll be
	happy to know what I think. I think
	our friend Sam Loomis didn't even
	know Mary was here.
		(smiles)
	See you in an hour. Or less.

He hangs up, gets out of the phone booth.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. BATES' MOTEL - (NIGHT)

A distant view of the House and Motel. There is a light on
in the house. There is also a light on in Norman's office.
We see Norman emerge from his office and move along the porch
toward the distant cabins. He carries sheets on his arm. He
goes into the last cabin and switches the light on. Into the
foreground the hood of the white Ford enters the scene and
stops. Arbogast gets out. He goes over to the Motel office.

EXT. MOTEL OFFICE - (NIGHT)

Arbogast goes in.

INT. OFFICE - (NIGHT)

Arbogast looks around the empty office and calls.

		ARBOGAST
	Bates!

He goes over to the door to the parlor and enters. He looks
around the bird-ridden room. He stops short as he sees:

C.U. - THE OLD SAFE IN THE CORNER

C.U. - ARBOGAST

goes over to it. He finds it unlocked. With a quick, cautious
look around he opens it.

C.U. - THE EMPTY SAFE

C.U. - ARBOGAST

straightens up and goes out.

EXT. MOTEL OFFICE - (NIGHT)

Arbogast comes out and looks off. He sees:

THE LAST LIT CABIN

The door ajar.

C.U. - ARBOGAST - (NIGHT)

would go along but he stops with a new thought. He turns
around and looks off.

L.S. - THE OLD HOUSE FROM HIS VIEWPOINT - (NIGHT)

C.U. - ARBOGAST

comes to a decision. He goes off.

L.S. ARBOGAST

dashes up the stone steps to the House.

MEDIUM SHOT

CAMERA HOLDS as Arbogast goes up onto the porch. The house
is dark within except, as we can now see, for a faint spill
of light in the foyer, light which comes from the upstairs
hall. Arbogast goes to the living room window, looks in,
sees only darkness. Then he goes to the door, listens for
along moment, hears nothing.

Very slowly, almost painfully, he turns the knob of the door
and pushes gently with his arm and shoulder. The door begins
to open. He allows it to open just enough for him to slip
through and into the foyer.

						CUT TO:

INT. FOYER OF BATES' HOUSE - (NIGHT)

Arbogast gradually eases the door closed, stands against it,
waiting. He looks up in the direction of the light, sees no
one. The door at the head of the stairs is closed. Arbogast
listens, holds his breath, hears what could be human sounds
coming from upstairs but realizes these could also be the
sounds of an old house after sunset. After a careful wait,
he crosses to the stairs, starts up, slowly, guardedly,
placing a foot squarely on each step to test it for squeaks
or groans before placing his full weight on it. CAMERA
FOLLOWS, remaining on floor level but TRAVELLING ALONG the
stairway as Arbogast makes his way up.

						CUT TO:

EXTREMELY HIGH ANGLE

INT. STAIRWAY AND UPSTAIRS LANDING

We see Arbogast coming up the stairs. And now we see, too,
the door of the mother's room, opening, carefully and slowly.

As Arbogast reaches the landing, the door opens and the mother
steps out, her hand raises high, the blade of an enormous
knife flashing.

C.U. - A BIG HEAD OF AN ASTONISHED ARBOGAST

The knife slashes across his cheek and neck. Blood spurts.
The sudden attack throws him off balance. He stumbles back
and staggers down the whole of the staircase. He frantically
gropes for the balustrade as he goes backwards down the
stairs. The CAMERA FOLLOWS him all the way. A wicked knife
keeps thrusting itself into the foreground. As he collapses
at the bottom, the black head and shoulders of Mrs. Bates
plunges into the foreground as the CAMERA MOVES IN to contain
the raising and descending murder weapon.

				        FADE OUT

						FADE IN

INT. BACK ROOM OF HARDWARE STORE - (NIGHT)

Lila is sitting close by the phone, and looks as if she hasn't
moved from it in the last hour. Sam is pacing, occasionally
stopping at the window, glancing out, pacing again. The ash
tray close to Lila is filled.

There is a thick atmosphere of smoke, tension and weariness
in the small, otherwise cozy room.

		SAM
		(at window, quietly)
	Sometimes Saturday night has a lonely
	sound. Ever notice, Lila?

		LILA
		(unable to keep up
		small talk)
	Sam. He said an hour. Or less.

		SAM
	It's been three.

		LILA
	Are we just going to go on sitting
	here?

		SAM
		(suddenly cheerful)
	He'll be back. Let's sit still and
	hang on, okay?

		LILA
	You have an awfully nice habit, Sam.

		SAM
	Hundreds! Which one is your pet?

		LILA
	Whenever I start contemplating the
	panic button, your back straightens
	up and your eyes get that God-looks-
	out-for-everybody look and... I feel
	better.

		SAM
	I feel better when you feel better.

		LILA
		(a pause - then she
		rises)
	Where's the old highway?

		SAM
	You want to run out there, bust in
	on Arbogast and the sick old lady,
	shake her up and maybe spoil
	everything Arbogast's been building
	for the last three hours.

		LILA
	Yes.

		SAM
	That wouldn't be a wise thing to do.

		LILA
	Patience doesn't run in our family.
	Sam, I'm going out there!

		SAM
	Arbogast said...

		LILA
	An hour! Or less!

Sam stares at her, frowns in concern over her very real
anxiety, goes to the phone, dials operator.

		SAM
		(into phone)
	Got the number of the motel out on
	the old highway? Bates, I think.
		(waits)

		LILA
	Sam! Why call when we can go?

		SAM
	And maybe pass Arbogast on the road?
		(into phone)
	Thanks.

He presses down the receiver, releases it, dials Bates'

Motel. The faint other-end ringing tones can be heard,
repeatedly, annoyingly. He waits.

		SAM
		(to Lila)
	Probably on his way back right now.

		LILA
	Sam, I'm going.

		SAM
		(hangs up and picks
		up his jacket)
	You'll never find it.

He starts for the door. Lila follows after him into the store.

INT. STORE

He pauses halfway down, turns, puts his hands on her arms.

		SAM
	Stay here.

		LILA
	Why can't I go out there with you?

		SAM
		(looks at her)
	I don't know...
		(he collects himself)
	One of us has to be here in case
	Arbogast's on the way.

		LILA
		(nervously)
	Just wait here?

		SAM
		(a warm smile)
	Contemplate your... panic button.

He hurries down to the street door and out. CAMERA HOLDS on
Lila as she stares after Sam. As she stands alone in the
darkened store, all the hardware seems to take on sinister
shapes.

C.U.

Among some bathroom fittings a nozzle from a shower falls
onto the floor.

MEDIUM SHOT

Lila turns and picks if from the floor and puts it back in
its place. She turns and again looks to the deserted street
with a touch of anxiety. She gives a slight unconscious
shiver.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. THE SWAMP - (NIGHT)

Tall and lonely still against the moonlight, the figure of
Norman, silhouetted. He doesn't move, merely stands there at
the edge of the swamp, staring down at the now calm and quiet
face of it.

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE MOTEL AND HOUSE - (NIGHT)

All light are out, except the light in Norman's mother's
room. And her figure can be seen sitting in the window,
relaxed in a high-back chair, her face turned into the room.
After a second, we hear the SOUND OF A MOTOR, and then Sam's
small pick-up truck swings into the driveway.

Sam stops the motor, automatically switches off headlights,
pauses as he observes the silence and darkness of the area.
Then he hops out of the cab, goes quickly to the office,
knocks on the door. As he waits for a response, he looks
down the long porch, studies the darkened cabins, knocks
again, louder, looks in the other direction and sees the
house and the figure at the one lit window. He stares a moment
then calls loudly:

		SAM
	Arbogast?

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE SWAMP

The silhouette of Norman. He is still. Over shot, very dimly,
comes the SOUND OF SAM'S VOICE, calling again for Arbogast.

Norman turns slowly until, in silhouette, we see his profile,
his chin lowered furtively as he looks over his shoulder in
the direction of the house. There is silence for a moment,
and then again the SOUND of Sam POUNDING at the door.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

INT. HARDWARE STORE - (NIGHT)

The store is in darkness, only the glow from the back room
spilling in.

L.S.

With CAMERA placed with its back to the street door, we can
see the distant tiny figure of Lila seated and waiting in
the back room beyond. There is a SOUND of a car pulling up.
The tiny figure jumps up and runs all the way from the back
room down the aisle of hardware and comes into a BIG HEAD.
We see Lila's desperate anxious look.

MEDIUM SHOT

From her viewpoint we see Sam alighting from his truck and
coming toward the door of the store. He enters. He and Lila
exchange quiet glances.

		SAM
	He didn't come back here?

		LILA
		(worriedly)
	Sam.

		SAM
	No Arbogast. No Bates. And only the
	old lady at home...
		(frowning)
	A sick old lady unable to answer the
	door... or unwilling.

		LILA
	Where could he have gone?

		SAM
	Maybe he got some definite lead.
	Maybe he went right on...

		LILA
	Without calling me?

		SAM
	In a hurry.

		LILA
	Sam, he called me when he had nothing
	definite, nothing but a dissatisfied
	feeling. Don't you think he'd have
	called if he had anything...

		SAM
		(interrupting)
	Yes. I think he would have.

Lila goes quiet. Sam starts toward the back room, pauses at
the doorway, turns. Lila has remained by the door, looking
out at the street. She feels his pause, turns, and for a
moment they share at each other across the darkened room.

		SAM
	Let's go see Al Chambers.

		LILA
	Who's he?

		SAM
	He's the Deputy Sheriff around here.

As he starts forward.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. STREET THE SHERIFF LIVES ON - (NIGHT)

A dark, quiet, tree-ceilinged street, the small neat houses
dim in the moonlight. Sam's pick-up truck comes down the
street, pulls up before the house of Sheriff Chambers. CAMERA
MOVES IN on Sam and Lila as they remain for a moment in the
truck's cab, staring quietly at the sleeping house.

		SAM
	Our Deputy sleeps.

		LILA
	Well?

		SAM
	Nothing.  Just... all the lights
	out... must be asleep.

		LILA
		(a small exasperation)
	Does that mean we can't...

		SAM
	No. I'm just procrastinating.  People
	hate when the doorbell rings in the
	middle of the night.
		(gives up, starts out)
	Come on.

He gets out of cab, goes around to help Lila. She is already
out. CAMERA FOLLOWS them up the small path to the front door.
Sam presses the bell button. Both he and Lila are almost
knocked over by the shocking, clanging, ear-splitting BLAST
OF THE BELL within the house, a ring which sounds more like
a fire alarm than a doorbell.

He tries to smile, fails. Lila doesn't even try. The
downstairs hall light goes on and a moment later the door is
unhesitatingly opened by MRS. CHAMBERS, a small, lively stick
of a woman wrapped in a thick flannel robe and a corona of
hospitality.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Oh?

		SAM
	Sorry, Mrs. Chambers. I hate bothering
	you...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	You didn't!
		(a cross look up at
		the bell)
	It's tinkerbell.
		(a quick smile at
		Lila)
	Al wants to be sure he'll hear it if
	anyone rings it in the middle of the
	night.
		(to Sam)
	Well come on in, at least!

As she opens the door wide,

						CUT TO:

INT. DOWNSTAIRS HALL OF SHERIFF'S HOUSE - (NIGHT)

Fat roses splatter the wallpaper. The stairs are carpeted.
The lighting is bright.

There is a perfectly fitting wall phone by the parlor arch.
Mrs. Chambers goes to the stairway, yells up.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Albert!
		(a tiny wait, a smile
		as Sam and Lila enter)
	Al Chambers!

Sam is about to close the door behind him. Mrs. Chambers
motions for him not to, scurries across the hall, leans
outside, presses the doorbell. The RING within the house is
even more shattering. She closes the door, starts to the
stairway, pauses as the SOUNDS of movement above COME OVER
SHOT.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Customers!

SHERIFF CHAMBERS comes down the stairs, in a bathrobe which
matches his wife's. He is a tall, narrow man with a face
originally destined for Mount Rushmore. He nods at Sam, looks
at him with wide-awake eyes and a no-nonsense concern.

		SAM
	We have a problem.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(to Lila)
	Let's go out back and have some coca
	while the men are talking.

		LILA
	No, thank you. It's my problem, too.

		SAM
	I don't know where to start...
		(a look at Lila)
	Except at the beginning.

		LILA
	Yes.

		SAM
		(to Sheriff)
	This is Lila Crane, from Phoenix.
	She's been here for a few days,
	looking for her sister. There's a
	private detective helping... and,
	well, we got a call tonight, from
	this detective, saying he'd traced
	Mary...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Mary is Lila's sister?

		SAM
	Yes. He traced her to that motel,
	out on the old highway...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(to the Sheriff)
	Bates' Motel.
		(to Lila)
	He has a mind like a mechanical brain
	and the more information you feed
	it... Go on, Sam.

		SAM
	He traced her there and called us to
	say he was going to question Mrs.
	Bates...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(a pleasant shock)
	Norman took a wife?

		SAM
	No. An old woman, his mother.
		(to Sheriff, quickly)
	That was early this evening. And we
	haven't seen or heard from him since.
	I went out to the motel, just got
	back. No one was in the office, and...

		LILA
		(interrupting,
		anxiously)
	Will you help us? I think something's
	wrong out there!

		SHERIFF
		(after a considerate
		pause)
	Now. Your sister is missing how long?

		LILA
	She left Phoenix a week ago yesterday.
	And no trace until...

		SHERIFF
	How'd you and this detective come to
	trace her to Fairvale?

		SAM
	They thought she'd be coming to me.

		SHERIFF
	Left Phoenix under her own steam?

		LILA
	Yes.

		SHERIFF
		(a pause)
	She ain't missing so much as she's
	run away.

		SAM
	Yes.

		SHERIFF
	From what?

		LILA
		(a look at sam, then:)
	She stole some money.

		SHERIFF
	A lot?

		LILA
	Forty thousand dollars.

		SHERIFF
	And the police haven't been able
	to...

		SAM
		(interrupting)
	Everyone concerned thought... if
	they could get her to give back the
	money... they could avoid involving
	her with the police.

		SHERIFF
	Explains the private detective. He
	traced her to the Bates place.  What'd
	he exactly say when he called you?

		LILA
	Mary had been there, one night, and
	had left.

		SHERIFF
	With the forty thousand dollars?

		LILA
	He didn't mention the money.
		(anxiously)
	What he said on the phone isn't
	important, is it?  He was supposed
	to come back after he spoke to the
	mother, and he didn't! That's what I
	want you to do something about!

		SHERIFF
	Like what?

		LILA
	Go out there! Find somebody, ask
	some questions!
		(a pause)
	I'm sorry if I seem over-anxious to
	you. I keep thinking... something's
	wrong. I have to know what!

		SHERIFF
	I think something's wrong, too, Miss.
	But not the same thing. I think your
	private detective is what's wrong.
		(As Lila is about to
		object)
	I think he got himself a hot lead as
	to where your sister was going...
	probably from Norman Bates...  and
	called you to keep you still while
	he took off after her and the money.

		LILA
	He said he was dissatisfied... and
	was going back.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(to Sheriff)
	Why don't you call Norman and let
	him say just what happened, if he
	give the man a hot lead and he did
	just scooted off... it'll make the
	girl feel better, Albert.

		SHERIFF
	At this hour?

		SAM
	He was out when I was there. If he's
	back he probably isn't even in bed
	yet.

		SHERIFF
	He wasn't out when you were there.
	He just wasn't answering the door in
	the dead of night... like some people
	do. This fellow lives like a hermit...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Recluse. Kinder word.

		SHERIFF
		(to Sam)
	You must remember that bad business
	out there. About ten years ago...

		SAM
	I've only been here five. Right now
	it feels like ten, but...

		LILA
	All right! Then call! At least, call!

Mrs. Chambers goes to phone, dials operator.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(into phone)
	Florrie, the Sheriff wants you to
	connect him with the Bates Motel.

She hands the receiver to the Sheriff. He takes it,
reluctantly, listens to the dim sound of RINGING on the other
end. After a moment:

		SHERIFF
		(into phone)
	Norman? Sheriff Chambers.
		(listens)
	Been just fine, thanks. Listen, we
	got some worries here. Did you have
	a man stop out there tonight...
		(listens)
	Well, this one wouldn't be a customer,
	anyway. A private detective, name
	of...

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Arbogast.

		SHERIFF
		(into phone)
	Arbogast.
		(listens)
	And after he left?
		(listens)
	No, it's okay, Norman. How's it been
	going out there?
		(listens)
	Well, I think you oughta unload that
	place and open up closer in to the
	action, a smaller place, you know...
	but...

		LILA
	Please!

		SHERIFF
		(into phone)
	Sorry I got you up, boy. Go back to
	sleep. Yeah, be glad to.
		(hangs up, turns to
		Mrs. Chambers)
	Said to give you his regards.

		SAM
		(faint irony)
	Was that all?

		SHERIFF
	This detective was out there and
	Norman told him about the girl and
	the detective thanked him and went
	away.

		LILA
	And he didn't go back? Didn't see
	the mother?

The Sheriff looks long at Lila, shakes his head
sympathetically.

		SHERIFF
	You should've called in the police
	the second you found your sister has
	skipped. You go starting private
	investigations, using people you
	don't even know...

		LILA
	What difference does that...

		SHERIFF
	Your Detective told you a nakedfaced
	lie.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Barefaced.

		SHERIFF
	He told you he wasn't coming right
	back cause he wanted to question
	Norman Bates' mother, right?

		LILA
	Yes.

		SHERIFF
		(a pause, then calmly)
	Norman Bates' mother has been dead
	and buried in Greenlawn Cemetery for
	the last ten years!

There is a long silence. Sam and Lila stare at the Sheriff.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	I helped Norman pick out the dress
	she was buried in. Periwinkle blue.

		SHERIFF
	It ain't only local history, Sam,
	it's the only murder-and-suicide
	case in Fairvale ledgers! Mrs.
	Bates poisoned this guy she was...
	involved with, when she found out he
	was married, then took a helping of
	the same stuff herself.  Strychnine.
	Ugly way to die.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Norman found them dead together.  In
	bed.

		SAM
	You mean that old woman I saw sittin'
	in the window wasn't Norman Bates'
	mother?

		MRS. CHAMBERS
		(hopefully, happily)
	Maybe you saw Mary!

		SAM
	I'd know the difference between Mary
	and an old woman.

		SHERIFF
	Now wait a minute, Sam. You sure you
	saw an old woman?

		SAM
	Yes! In the house behind the motel.
	I pounded and called but she... just
	ignored me.

		SHERIFF
	And you want to tell me you saw Norman
	Bates' mother.

		LILA
	It must've been. Arbogast said so,
	too... and he said the young man
	wouldn't let him see her because she
	was ill!

The Sheriff stares at both of them, and when he finally speaks
there is an almost inaudible tone or irony in his voice.

		SHERIFF
	Well, if the woman up there is Mrs.
	Bates... who's that woman buried out
	at Greenlawn Cemetery?

				   QUICK CUT TO:

INT. NORMAN'S PARLOR BEHIND OFFICE - (NIGHT)

Norman sits in the dim, one-lamp light, the phone next to
him, his hand still near it as if he had not been able to
move his hand after hanging up. He is staring at the shrike-
like bird which is perched on the lamp shade. Decision and
resolution are beginning to show in his face. Suddenly he
rises, starts quickly out of the room, tries to switch off
the lamp as he goes and in so doing succeeds only in knocking
the bird off the shade.

He watches it fall, does not try to catch it. It hits the
floor with a thud and sawdust spills out. He stares sadly at
it, for a moment, then tends down, scoops up the sawdust,
tries to press it into the split seam, picks up the bird,
puts it in a drawer. Then he puts out the lamp, goes out,
crosses the darkened office and goes outside.

						CUT TO:

EXT. MOTEL AND HOUSE - (NIGHT)

Norman comes off the porch, walks to the path and directly
up to the house, opens the door and goes in.

						CUT TO:

INT. DOWNSTAIRS HALLWAY AND STAIRWAY - (NIGHT)

SHOOTING UP THE STAIRS

Norman goes up, pauses one moment outside his mother's door,
then opens it and goes in, leaving the door open.

For a moment we hear only Norman's low, quiet voice, his
words indistinguishable. Then we hear the cold shot of his
mother's derisive laughter.

		MOTHER'S VOICE
	I am sorry, boy, but you do manage
	to look ludicrous when you give me
	orders!

		NORMAN'S VOICE
	Please, mother...

		MOTHER'S VOICE
		(Sharp, laughter all
		gone)
	No! I will not hide in the fruit
	cellar!
		(A shrill laugh)
	Think I'm fruity, huh?
		(Hard, cold again)
	I'm staying right here!  This is my
	room and no one will drag me out of
	it... least of all my big bold son!

		NORMAN'S VOICE
		(Rising now, anxiously)
	They'll come now, Mother. He came
	after the girl and now someone will
	come after him! How long do you think
	you can go on... Mother, please,
	just for a few days, just so they
	won't find you!

		MOTHER'S VOICE
		(Mimicking)
	Just for a few days...
		(Furious)
	In that dank fruit cellar? No!  You
	hid me there once, boy, and you won't
	do it again! Not ever again!  Now
	get out!
		(A pause, quiet)
	I told you to get out, boy!
		(A longer pause)
	Norman! What do you think you're
	going to do? Don't you touch me!
	Don't! Norman!
		(A pause, then
		cajolingly)
	All right, son, put me down and I'll
	go. I'll go on my own two feet. I
	can go on my own two feet, can't I?

During all this the CAMERA has been slowly creeping up the
stairs. It does not stop at the top however, but continues
on the same high angle that we had in Scene 57.

She starts to laugh, a terrible sound like an obscene melody.

		NORMAN'S VOICE
	I'll carry you, mother.

Norman comes out of the room, his mother held in his arms,
her head leaning against his shoulder. He carries her down
the stairs, along the lower landing to the cellar stairs,
and then down those stairs to the basement.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. FAIRVALE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH - (MORNING)

An overcast morning, but a sunny-faced crowd. The service is
just over, there is contentment, and peace, and just a little
I-went-to-church-smugness in the faces of the churchgoers as
they come out of the chapel, and spread their separate ways
away.

Amongst the crowd, waiting and searching the faces, are Sam
and Lila. In their expressions there is no peace, no
contentment. CAMERA MOVES IN CLOSE. They are not speaking.
Lila looks as if she has had no sleep.

Suddenly, Sam becomes alert, takes Lila's arm, starts toward
the church.

CAMERA MOVES WITH THEM, stops as they approach Sheriff and
Mrs. Chambers. The Sheriff stares rather sympathetically at
Lila. Mrs. Chambers smiles nicely.

		SAM
	We thought, if you didn't mind, we'd
	go out to the motel with you.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	He's already been.

		SHERIFF
	Went out before service.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	Have you two had breakfast?

		SAM
		(To Sheriff, not a
		question)
	You didn't find anything.

		SHERIFF
	Nothing. Here, let's clear the path.

He moves away and the others follow. CAMERA PANS them to the
curb.

		LILA
		(Interrupting)
	Did he say anything about my sister?

		SHERIFF
	Just what he told your detective.

She used a fake name, saw the register myself. Saw the whole
place, as a matter of fact. That boy is alone there.

		SAM
	No mother.

		SHERIFF
	You must've seen an illusion, Sam.
	Now, I know you're not the seeing-
	illusion type... But no woman was
	illusion there and I don't believe
	in ghosts, so there it is!

		LILA
	I still feel...

		SHERIFF
	Can see you do. Sorry I couldn't
	make you feel better. You want to
	come to my office this afternoon and
	report a missing person... And the
	theft, is what you want to do!  Sooner
	you drop this thing in the lap of
	the law, that's the sooner you'll
	stand a chance of your sister bein'
	picked up. How about that?

		LILA
	I don't know.

		MRS. CHAMBERS
	It's Sunday. Come over and do the
	reporting at the house, 'round dinner
	time. Make it nicer. You too, Sam.

She smiles brightly, as if having invited them over to discuss
this year's charity fandango, takes the

Sheriff's arm, starts away. The Sheriff nods as he goes.

Sam and Lila are alone now, at the curb, before the deserted
chapel. For a long moment they just stand there, their faces
as gray and overcast as the sky.

		SAM
	Maybe I am the seeing-illusions type.

		LILA
	You're not.

Sam takes her arm, starts walking her up the street toward
the spot where his pick-up truck is parked.

CAMERA FOLLOWS them.

		SAM
	Want me to drop you at the hotel?
	Or you want to come over to the store?

Lila does not answer. They reach the truck. Lila looks
directly at Sam as he helps her into the cab.

		LILA
	I won't feel satisfied unless I got
	out there, Sam.

		SAM
	Neither will I.

He slams the door, hurries around truck, gets into driver's
seat, starts motor. As the truck drives off,

				    DISSOLVE TO:

SAM AND LILA IN TRUCK - (PROCESS - HIGHWAY)

For a moment, both are silent; Sam watching the road as if
there were other cars on it, Lila staring at nothing in
particular, except perhaps her own inner fear.

		LILA
	I wonder if we'll ever see Mary again.

		SAM
	Of course we will.

		LILA
	Alive.

Sam looks as if he'd like to say something humorous, something
to cheer her. He cannot. He remains silent.

		LILA
	We lived together all our lives.

When we woke up one morning and found ourselves orphans,
Mary quit college and got a job, so I could go to college.

		SAM
	Where'd you go to college?

		LILA
	I didn't. I got a job, too.
		(A pause)
	I wonder if that hurt her, my not
	letting her sacrifice for me?  Some
	people are so willing to suffer for
	you that they suffer more if you
	don't let them.

		SAM
		(Almost to himself)
	She was willing to lick the stamps.

Lila looks quizzically at him, is too concerned to pursue
it.

		LILA
	I wonder so many things about her
	now.  Why she never told me about
	you...  Funny, when you think there's
	an answer to everything, you think
	you know all the answers.

		SAM
	We were going to get married. Are
	going to get married!

		LILA
	Do you know how I found out about
	you? I found one of your letters...
	it was a nice letter, Sam.

		SAM
	This is the old highway.

		LILA
	I suppose... when you were able to
	marry her she'd have presented you,
	all shiny and proper... she always
	tried to be proper.

		SAM
	Watch your tenses.

		LILA
	Huh?

		SAM
	She always tries to be proper.

Sam slows the truck to a stop, sighs, starts to light up a
cigarette. Lila looks questioningly and impatiently at him.

		LILA
	You going to wait here for me?

		SAM
	I'm going with you. But we'd better
	decide what we're going to say and
	do when we walk in...

		LILA
	We're going to register. As man and
	wife. And get shown to a cabin...
	and then search every inch of that
	place, inside and... outside.

		SAM
	You won't believe it...
		(Starts motor)
	But this will be the first time
	I've ever pulled one of those man-
	and-wife-renting-cabin capers!

		LILA
		(A tiny smile, first
		in hours)
	I believe it.

As truck starts to drive on,

						CUT TO:

EXT. THE BATES MOTEL AND HOUSE - (DAY)

The place is empty and silent and washed dirty by the deep
gray of the cloudy sky. We see Sam's truck turning into the
driveway and pulling to a stop. After a moment, Sam and Lila
get out of the truck.

FRESH ANGLE

Close on Sam and Lila as they meet on the porch side of the
truck. The motel office and the house beyond can be seen in
b.g. of shot. Sam and Lila merely stare for a moment, then
turn and gaze up at the house. There is no figure in the
window and the shade is drawn. Same goes to the office door,
peers in, knocks, opens door, enters. Lila remains on the
driveway, beside the truck.

						CUT TO:

INT. THE MOTHER'S ROOM - (DAY)

CLOSE ANGLE on Norman standing by the window. He has pulled
the curtains very slightly apart, is staring out and down at
the motel, his eyes studying the lone figure of Lila, who is
standing by the truck and looking up at the house.  Norman
studies her, and as her eyes look up at this very window he
closes the curtains, turns away.

We see the suspicion and fear in his face, the surge of panic
and his struggle to contain it. Then he goes away. CAMERA
remains on window, shooting out and down, and through the
frail curtains we can see Sam as he comes out of the motel
office and joins Lila.

EXT. MOTEL OFFICE - CLOSE ON SAM AND LILA

		SAM
		(Unconsciously
		whispering)
	I wonder where Norman Bates does his
	hermiting?

		LILA
	Someone was at that window. I saw
	the curtain move.

Sam takes Lila's arm.

		SAM
	Come on.

He starts with her toward the path which leads to the old
house. CAMERA PANS with them, and as they turn around the
office corner, they see Norman coming down the path toward
them. They pause and Norman pauses. He does not smile, nor
speak. His usual grin and soft friendliness are gone;
containment and impassivity lie in their place.

		SAM
		(Cheerfully)
	Just coming up to ring for you.

		NORMAN
		(Coming forward)
	I suppose you want a cabin.

		SAM
	We'd hoped to make it straight to
	San Francisco, but we don't like the
	look of that sky. Looks like a bad
	day coming... doesn't it.

Norman walks past Sam, giving him the sort of quick,
disapproving glance one gives a man who is obviously lying,
goes onto the porch and into the office. Sam and Lila follow
Norman.

INT. MOTEL OFFICE - (DAY)

Norman crosses to the desk, goes behind it, takes the key to
cabin number twelve off the keyboard. Sam and Lila have
entered and are almost to the desk-counter by this time.

		NORMAN
	I'll take you to...

		SAM
	Better sign in first, hasn't we?

Sam eyes scan the counter, looking for a registration book.

		NORMAN
	It isn't necessary.

		SAM
		(Interrupting with a
		friendly cheerfulness)
	Uh, uh! My boss is paying for this
	trip... ninety percent business...
	and he wants practically notarized
	receipts. I better sign in and get a
	receipt.

Norman stares at Sam, as if he'd like to yell at him, call
him "liar." Instead he reaches under the desk counter, brings
out the registration book. Lila moves closer, studies the
book as Sam signs in. Sam signs "Joe and Mrs. Johnson."  The
signature and city of "Marie Samuels" and after it, the
notation "Cabin One," can be clearly seen three registrations
above Sam's.

When Sam has finished he closes book, hands it back to Norman.
Norman does not take it, starts out from behind counter.

		NORMAN
	I'll get your bags.

		SAM
	Haven't any.

		NORMAN
		(after a stare)
	I'll show you the cabin.

As he starts for the door, Sam laughs. Norman stops, turns,
looks at him.

		SAM
	First time I've seen it happen.
		(to Lila)
	Check in any place in this country
	without bags, and you have to pay in
	advance.

Sam smiles as if at a funny remark, takes a bill out of his
pocket.

		NORMAN
	Ten dollars...

Norman returns to Sam, takes the extended bill, is about to
start out again.

		SAM
	That receipt...?

Norman goes reluctantly behind counter, lays down the key to
cabin twelve, takes a receipt book out of the drawer under
counter, starts to write. Lila steps up to the desk, picks
up the key, quickly, starts out.

		LILA
	I'll start ahead.

Norman looks up, gazes her as she goes out door.

EXT. THE MOTEL - (DAY)

Lila comes along the porch, pauses before cabin one, tries
the door. It opens. She closes it quickly as she hears Sam
and Norman coming out of the motel office, continues on down
the porch.

		SAM
		(To Norman, who is
		following)
	Don't bother yourself... we'll find
	it.

He goes on down the porch, doesn't even glance at cabin one,
walks quickly and catches up to Lila just as she reaches
cabin twelve. CAMERA REMAINS with Norman, who is standing by
the office door, looking after Sam and Lila, his face alert
and no longer impassive. He waits a moment, after they have
closed their cabin door, then crosses to the pickup truck.
CAMERA MOVES with him. He studies the truck, then leans in
through the driver's window, twists the registration card
around, reads it.

It gives the correct name and address of Sam Loomis.

Norman comes back out of the window, glances once more toward
cabin twelve, then at the old house. His suspicions are
confirmed, and now there is the relaxation of relief in his
face. He takes on a purposeful air, turns, strides up the
path, up onto the porch of the house, opens the door, goes
in.

INT. CABIN TWELVE - (DAY)

Lila is at the cabin's rear window, looking out, straining
for a glimpse of the old house, which cannot be seen from
the window of this cabin.

She turns, frustrated, anxious. Sam is standing at the foot
of the bed, staring at the smooth coverlet, his brow creased
in a sadness.

		LILA
	We should have asked for Cabin One...
	The one Mary was in.

		SAM
	I'm glad we didn't.

He pulls his eyes from the bed, crosses to the desk, sits
wearily, lights a cigarette. Lila watches him for a moment,
feels a real compassion, goes to the bed, sits on its edge,
turns again and looks at Sam's back.

		LILA
	We have to go into that cabin and
	search it, Sam... no matter what
	we're afraid of finding and no matter
	how much it may hurt.

		SAM
	I know.
		(A pause)
	Do you think if something happened,
	it happened there?

		LILA
		(A pause, then:)
	Sam, if you owned a useless business
	like this motel... one you probably
	couldn't even sell...  what would
	you need to get away, to start a new
	business, somewhere else?
		(As Sam studies her)
	Forty thousand dollars?

		SAM
	How could we prove...
		(An almost hopeless
		laugh)
	Well, if he opens a new motel on the
	new highway... say, a year from now...

		LILA
	There must be some proof that exists
	right now! Something that proves he
	got that money away from Mary...
	Some way!

		SAM
	What makes you sound so certain?

		LILA
	Arbogast! Sam, he liked me... or
	felt sorry for me... and he was
	starting to feel the same about you.
	I heard it when he called... in his
	voice, a caring. He wouldn't have
	gone anywhere or done anything without
	telling us.  Unless he was stopped.
	And he was stopped, so he must have
	found out something!

Sam considers a moment, nods agreement, rises.

		SAM
	We'll start with Cabin One.

He goes to the door, opens it slightly, looks out, then,
back to Lila:

		SAM
	If he sees us... we're just taking
	the air.

Lila goes to the door. He holds it open and she goes out.

EXT. THE MOTEL - (DAY)

Sam closes the door, joins Lila, takes her hand.

Together they walk along the porch in the direction of Cabin
One. CAMERA FOLLOWS. They pause before the door of Cabin
One. Sam motions Lila to wait, to hold still, then goes on
to the office, opens the door, calls in:

		SAM
	Bates?

He waits, there is no response. He goes in and in a moment
comes back out, closes the door, goes to Lila.

She has already opened the door of Cabin One and has started
to enter.

INT. CABIN ONE - (DAY)

The blinds are closed and the room is almost night-dark.

Sam comes in after Lila, closes the door behind him.

For a moment they just gaze at the room, as if willing it to
tell them some satisfactory story.

Neither speaks. Then, in dark silence, they begin to search,
going methodically and thoroughly through all drawers, the
closet, the desk, searching under the bed and in dark corners,
not knowing what they expect to find and yet expecting to
find some thing. Lila opens the bathroom door, looks in. The
windowless room is very dark. She switches on the light,
goes in. Sam moves toward the bathroom, is about to follow
her in when he notices which room it is and automatically
catches himself up, backs out.

		SAM
	Sorry.

		LILA
	Hospital clean.

		SAM
	What?

		LILA
	The bathroom. Look at how clean it
	is. The one in our cabin is clean...
	but this is clean!

Sam goes in, glances around, nods. Lila goes through the
medicine cabinet, finds nothing but a glass and two tiny
tabs of soap. Sam leans against the door-jamb, looks at the
tub, the shower pipe above it. He continues to stare, more
interested suddenly, as if bothered by some off-key evidence
he can't put his finger on. Then he looks at the shower
curtain rod.

And realizes there is no shower curtain. He frowns, is about
to say something when Lila, who has been momentarily out of
shot, interrupts.

Sam turns, CAMERA TURNS, and we see Lila is standing above
the toilet bowl, a tiny piece of wet paper stuck to the tip
of her right index finger.

		SAM
	What is it?

		LILA
	It didn't get washed down. It's
	figuring... the kind you tear up and
	get rid of.
		(Extending her finger
		toward Sam)
	Some figure has been added to or
	subtracted from... forty thousand.

Sam lifts the piece of paper off her finger, studies it,
takes out his wallet, presses the wet scrap to his driver's
license shield, puts it back in the wallet and puts the wallet
away.

		LILA
	That's proof Mary was here!  It would
	be too wild a coincidence for somebody
	else to...

		SAM
		(Reminding)
	Bates never denied Mary was here.

		LILA
		(Reminded)
	Yes.
		(A thought)
	But maybe this proves that Bates
	found out about the money.

		SAM
	Do we simply ask him where he's hidden
	it?

		LILA
	Sam, that old woman, whoever she is.
	I think she told Arbogast something!
	And I want her to tell us the same
	thing!

She starts out of the bathroom. Sam takes hold of her arm,
stops her.

		SAM
	You can't go up there.

		LILA
	Why not?

		SAM
	Bates.

CAMERA STARTS TO PAN AWAY from them, moves slowly over the
room, very slowly.

		LILA'S VOICE (O.S.)
	Let's find him. One of us can keep
	him occupied while the other gets to
	the woman.

		SAM'S VOICE (O.S.)
	You won't be able to hold him still
	if he doesn't want to be held. And I
	don't like you going into that house
	alone, Lila.

CAMERA HAS PANNED clear across to the opposite wall now, and
is moving up closer and closer to the tiny-flowered wall
paper, finally closing in on one small rosebud.

		LILA'S VOICE (O.S.)
	I can handle a sick old woman.

Now we see that the rosebud has been cut out, that this is
the reverse side of the hole Norman peeped through to watch
Mary. And we see the pupil of Norman's eye now.

		SAM'S VOICE (O.S.)
	All right. I'll find Bates and keep
	him occupied.

The eye moves away and there is a brief flash of light before
the hole is covered, on the other side, by the wall-hung
painting.

FRESH ANGLE - LILA AND SAM

They are about to start out. Sam stops her again.

		SAM
	Wait a minute. If you get anything
	out of the mother...
		(A thought)
	Can you find your way back to town?
		(As Lila nods yes)
	If you do get anything, don't stop
	to tell me.

Lila nods quickly, hurries to the door. Sam gets to it first,
opens it a slight crack, looks out, then opens it wide enough
for Lila and Himself to pass through.

EXT. THE MOTEL - (DAY)

ANGLE CLOSE on cabin one as Lila comes out, turns to her
left, goes along porch toward cabin twelve. Sam remains at
the door, then turns right, heading for the path. As he passes
the office, he is shocked to see Norman standing just inside
the open door.

		NORMAN
	Looking for me?

		SAM
		(Recovering)
	Yes, matter of fact.
		(The friendly grin)
	The wife's taking a nap and... I can
	never keep quiet enough for her...
	so I thought I'd look you up and...
	talk.

		NORMAN
	Satisfied with your cabin?

		SAM
	Fine.

Sam starts into the office. Just before going in, he glances
down the long porch, sees Lila standing outside the door of
cabin twelve, waves her a tiny "all clear" signal.

LILA

CAMERA ANGLES to include Lila and her point of view.

She watches Sam disappear into the office, waits until she
hears the door close, then looks about for another way to
reach the house. She sees the small alley at the end of this
L of cabins, starts toward it.

EXT. REAR OF MOTEL - S.C.U. LILA - (DAY)

Behind the motel Lila hesitates. She looks ahead.

LONG SHOT - (DAY)

The old house standing against the sky.

CLOSE UP - (DAY)

Lila moves forward.

LONG SHOT - (DAY)

The CAMERA approaching the house.

CLOSE UP - (DAY)

Lila glances toward the back of Norman's parlor. She moves
on.

LONG SHOT - (DAY)

The house coming nearer.

CLOSE UP - (DAY)

Lila looks up at the house. She moves forward purposefully.

S.L.S. - (DAY)

The house and the porch.

CLOSE UP - (DAY)

Lila stops at the house and looks up. She glances back.

She turns to the house again.

S.L.S. - (DAY)

The CAMERA MOUNTS the steps to the porch.

C.U. - (DAY)

Lila puts out her hand.

S.C.U. - (DAY)

Lila's hand pushes the door open. We see the hallway.

Lila ENTERS PAST CAMERA.

INT. DOWNSTAIRS HALLWAY OF OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila closes the door, remains by it for a moment, quiet,
listening. Her eyes scan the layout, the closed door which
leads off the hallway, to the dining room on the right and
the parlor on the left. Down at the end of the hall is the
kitchen, the door wide open, the room beyond dim and silent.
She notices the stairs leading down to the basement, stares
at them, then back to the stairs leading to the second floor.
She starts forward, and seems about to investigate the parlor
and dining room.

INT. THE MOTEL OFFICE - (DAY)

Norman is behind the counter, standing, staring at Sam who
is sitting relaxedly on a small sofa. Norman has the look of
one who is protecting himself, as if the counter were a
protective wall against the threatening world across it.

		SAM
		(Cheerfully, as if
		after a self-conscious
		pause)
	I've been doing all the talking so
	far, haven't I?

		NORMAN
	Yes.

		SAM
	I always thought it was the people
	who are alone so much who do all the
	talking when they get the chance.
	Yet there you are, doing all the
	listening!
		(A pause)
	You are alone here, aren't you?
		(As Norman does not
		reply)
	It would drive me crazy.

		NORMAN
	That would be a rather extreme
	reaction, wouldn't it?

		SAM
		(Lightly)
	Just an expression...
		(More seriously)
	What I meant was... I'd do just about
	anything... to get away.  Wouldn't
	you?

INT. DOWNSTAIRS HALLWAY AND STAIRS OF OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila is halfway up the stairs. As she climbs she is startled
by the creaks and groans of the old wood of the steps. She
steps more carefully. CAMERA remains at foot of stair, TILTING
UP as Lila climbs. She pauses at the head of the stair. The
door on her right, which opens into the mother's room, is
closed. To her left is another door, half-open. Directly
before her is a third door, closed. She holds a long moment,
trying to picture in her mind which room would look out on
the front of the house, decides, chooses the correct door,
the one on her right. She goes to it, knocks lightly.

INT. THE MOTHER'S ROOM (DAY) - CLOSE ANGLE ON DOOR

We hear Lila's second knock, then, faintly, her soft call.

		LILA'S VOICE (O.S.)
	Mrs. Bates?

There is quiet for a moment, then the door begins to open,
and we see Lila. She stands on the threshold, looking in at
the room, instantly disturbed by it, almost chilled, her
expression indicating an impulse to close the door and go
away from this room forever.

After a moment, she enters, leaving the door open behind
her. CAMERA PULLS BACK AND AWAY and we now see the room as
Lila sees it.

It is ornate, damask-and-mahogany, thick and warm and ripe,
an olla podrida of mismated furnishings and bric-a-brac of
the last century. The bed is four poster, but uncanoped; the
dressing table is fancy and flounced with satin; there is a
great chiffonier, a big-doored wardrobe, a large, oval, full-
length pier-glass (this against the wall directly opposite
the door), a satin recamier, an upholstered armchair by the
window, a white marble fireplace, its grate cold but piled
with ashes.

And there is in the room an unmistakably live quality, as if
even though it is presently unoccupied, it has not been long
vacated by some musty presence.

Lila glances at the bed. The damask coverlet is thrown over
it, but it is not neat, there is the imprint of a body on
it, a body which obviously has slept in a curled-up, womb-
like position. Lila stares at it for a moment, up, then goes
to the dressing table. Its top is scattered with boxes and
jars of cosmetics and creams, traces of fresh powder, an
opened bottle or perfume, a comb, and a brush with traces of
hair in its bristles. Lila moves on, catches a glimpse of
herself in the pier-glass, is startled, turns away, goes to
the chiffonier, is about to open a drawer, sees the high
wardrobe out of the corner of her eyes, goes to it,
hesitantly. She opens one door. Fresh, clean, well pressed
dresses hang neatly. Lila opens the other door. The sweaters
and dresses and robes hang freely, none in moth-proof, storage-
type bags. There is even a well-brushed collar of foxes.
Along the floor of the wardrobe is a line of clean, polished
shoes. Lila stares, then closes the door, turns, looks once
again over the whole room, starts out,

INT. THE UPSTAIRS HALLWAY OF THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila comes out of the mother's room, closes the door behind
her, looks down the stairs, then starts across the hall to
the room whose door is half-open. The room within is dark,
the shades drawn full.

Lila pauses on the threshold, reaches in, feels the wall,
throws on a switch.

INT. MOTEL OFFICE - (DAY)

Sam has risen, is standing by the counter now.

		SAM
	I'm not saying you shouldn't be
	contented here, I'm just doubting
	that you are. I think if you saw a
	chance to get out from under...
	you'd unload this place...

		NORMAN
		(Angrily)
	This place! This isn't 'a place.'
	It's my only world. I grew up in
	that house back there. I was a happy
	child. My mother and I... we were
	more than happy.

		SAM
	And now that your mother's dead?

Norman snaps a sharp, fast, ugly look at him.

		NORMAN
	My mother is not dead!

		SAM
		(Softly)
	I didn't think so.

INT. NORMAN'S ROOM IN THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila is standing in the doorway, staring at the room in sick
dismay. The room is grotesque, a horrible, ludicrous fantasy
of childhood held beyond the point of decency.

It is a small room. The walls are fancied with romping
silhouettes of teddy-bears and sailboats and carousels and
fat cows jumping over aghast moons. The bed is small, far
too short for a man of Norman's height. And yet the rumpled
covers indicate that it is in this bed that Norman sleeps.
Next to the bed is an old-fashioned toy chest. On its top
there are a bird-in-a-cage lamp, a plain-bound book, and an
ash tray filled with ashes and cigarette stubs. A grown man's
shirt hangs on a child's clothes tree.

Against one wall there is a narrow, high bookcase filled
with thick, unchildish-looking books. On the small, white
chest of drawers there is an old, child's victrola. The record
on the turntable is discovered, on close inspection, to be
Beethoven's Eroica Symphony.

Lila studies the room, fascinated and repelled. She glances
at the bookcase, comes into the room, goes to the bookcase
and pulls out a thick, large, plain-bound book. She opens
it. Her eyes go wide in shock. And then there is disgust.
She slams the book closed, drops it.

INT. THE MOTEL OFFICE - (DAY)

Norman, behind the counter, has moved back against the wall.
Sam is still on the other side of the counter, but is leaning
forward, his eyes hard on Norman's face.

Norman's face is no longer expressionless. It has the stark,
high sheen of a cornered animal.

		SAM
		(Pressing)
	You look frightened. Have I been
	saying something frightening?

		NORMAN
	I don't know what you've been saying.

		SAM
	I've been talking about your mother...
	about your motel. How are you going
	to do it?

		NORMAN
	Do what?

		SAM
	Buy a new one! In a new town!
	Where you won't have to hide your
	mother!

		NORMAN
	Shut up!

		SAM
	Where will you get the money to do
	that, Bates... or do you already
	have it... socked away... a lot of
	it...

		NORMAN
	Leave me alone!

		SAM
	...Forty thousand dollars!

		NORMAN
	Leave me alone!

He is close to panic now. He turns, swiftly, dashes back
into his private parlor. Sam goes quickly around the counter,
follows.

INT. NORMAN'S PRIVATE PARLOR - (DAY)

Norman hears Sam following, wants to run, to never be reached
by this man. He crosses the small room, drawn to the rear
window, as if he might fly through it. Sam enters, pauses.
Norman turns, back against the window, as unable to fly away
as are the many still, stuffed birds. Sam registers a brief
flicker of reaction when he sees the birds, but continues to
gaze at Norman, hard.

		SAM
	I bet your mother knows where the
	money is. And what you did to get
	it. And I think she'll tell us.

Something self-assured and confident in Sam's tone gives
Norman a new, more terrified alarm. He turns his head, glances
out the window at the old house. He looks back at Sam and
there is terror in his voice.

		NORMAN
	Where's that girl? The girl you came
	with! Where is she?

Sam does not respond, smiles a half-smile, turns to examine
a stuffed owl. Norman looks back at the house.

		NORMAN
		(A horrible groan)
	Oh, God!

INT. UPSTAIRS HALL OF THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila, shaken and disturbed, almost sickened, is coming out
of Norman's room. She has left the light on. She pauses in
the middle of the landing, looks at the closed door opposite
the stairs, goes to it, opens it, sees that it is the
bathroom, pulls the door to, turns, starts toward the stairs.

INT. NORMAN'S PRIVATE PARLOR - (DAY)

Sam is lying on the floor, face downward, unmoving. A
candlestick is on the floor, close by his head, still rocking
as if just dropped. OVER SHOT comes the SOUND of Norman's
footsteps and CAMERA TURNS in time to catch a brief glimpse
of him going out into the office, almost at a run.

INT. STAIRWAY OF THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila is on the top step, looking down toward CAMERA.

She is listening, hoping to hear some human sound, some sound
she might follow, pursue. She hears nothing. She starts down
the stairs. Just below the halfway step, she looks at the
front door, sees out through the door window:

LILA'S VIEWPOINT - (DAY)

Norman coming.

INT. STAIRWAY OF THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

For a moment Lila panics, then she hurries down the steps,
cannot go in the direction of the front door, remembers the
stairway behind her, turns and runs in that direction. The
SOUND of Norman bounding up the porch steps can be heard.
Lila turns and dashes down the stairs which lead to the
basement, going down far enough to conceal herself, crouching
there.

Norman enters the hallway, closes the door softly, listens.
He glances once in the direction of the basement stairs. He
seems about to smile, when suddenly all expression vanishes
from his face, and he appears to enter a no-place, no-time
state. He crosses to the stairway, goes up.

Lila remains crouched on the basement stairs, listening to
the SOUNDS of Norman. His footsteps on the stairs followed
by the fast noises of doors opening, of fast moving about an
upstairs room. Convinced that he is searching the upstairs
for her, she decides to chance an escape. She starts up the
steps, is about to turn into the hallway when her eye is
caught by a glimmer of light down in the basement. She pauses,
looks down, sees the crack of light coming from behind the
not entirely closed door to the fruit cellar. The swift moving
SOUNDS of Norman continue to come from upstairs.

Lila is torn, knows she should get out of the house while
she has the chance, is unable to resist the impulse to check
that hidden-looking room down below, a room in which, she
desperately believes, there must lie some answer to what
happened to Mary. She turns and goes softly and quickly down
the stairs.

INT. THE BASEMENT OF THE OLD HOUSE - (DAY)

Lila reaches the bottom, stops, listens, hears the stairboards
creaking as footsteps fall hard and measured upon them. She
turns, pulls open the fruit cellar door, looks in. The woman
is sitting in a comfortable chair, the back of the chair,
and the woman, turned to the door. Lila calls a harsh,
frightened whisper.

		LILA
	Mrs. Bates...?

Lila goes into the room.

INT. THE FRUIT CELLAR

Lila goes to the chair, touches it. The touch disturbs the
figure. It starts to turn, slowly, stiffly, a clock-wise
movement. Lila looks at it in horror. It is the body of a
woman long dead. The skin is dry and pulled away from the
mouth and the teeth are revealed as in the skeleton's smile.
The eyes are gone from their sockets, the bridge of the nose
has collapsed, the hair is dry and wild, the cheeks are
sunken, the leathery-brown skin is powdered and rouged and
flaky. The body is dressed in a high-neck, clean, well-pressed
dress, obviously recently laundered and hand-ironed.

The movement of this stuffed, ill-preserved cadaver, turning
as if in response to Lila's call and touch, is actually
graceful, ballet-like, and the effect is terrible and obscene.

Lila gazes for one flicker of a deathly moment, then begins
to scream, a high, piercing, dreadful scream.

And Lila's scream is joined by another scream, a more
dreadful, horrifying scream which comes from the door behind
her.

		NORMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
		(screaming)
	Ayeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Am Norma
	Bates!

Lila turns.

NORMAN

His face is contorted. He wears a wild wig, a mockery of a
woman's hair. He is dressed in a high-neck dress which is
similar to that worn by the corpse of his mother. His hand
is raised high, poised to strike at Lila. There is a long
breadknife in it.

LILA

Close on her face. She is dumb-struck. Her eyes are screaming.

BACK TO NORMAN

As he is about to start forward, a man's hand reaches in
from the doorway behind, grabs Norman's wrist. Sam comes
through the door, still holding tight to the wrist, pulling
back the arm and at the same time throwing himself at Norman,
football tackle style.

SERIES OF CUTS - THE FIGHT

Norman and Sam, struggling. The wild fury in Norman's face,
the mad noise of his screams and vile curses. The terrified,
fight-to-the-death look of Sam. The still, staring Lila.

MRS. BATES

A close of her face, She appears to be watching and enjoying
the fight. Over the shot, the SOUNDS of the struggle, the
screams of Norman.

				    DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. COURTHOUSE AT READING - (NIGHT)

There are many people gathered about the steps, the curious
and the concerned and the morbid. At the curb, a couple of
newspaper cars, two or three police cars, and a mobile unit
truck from the local television outlet. There is noise, and
chattering as questions are asked and answers given, and the
sounds of traffic, and of the television equipment being
moved into the courthouse, for on-the-scene reporting, and
the stern voices of policemen trying to keep people back.
The scene has a bright glare about it, that quality of sudden
light thrown on a fearful darkness.

CLOSER ANGLE ON STEPS OF COURTHOUSE

A POLICEMAN trying to make way for the television men,
muttering "keep back," etc., to the spectators. A TELEVISION
MAN, carrying a piece of equipment goes through door, and
CAMERA FOLLOWS him into the courthouse vestibule.

Here, too, there is a crowd, composed of Policemen, Reporters,
Television Men. The Television Men we have been following
stops beside a Policeman.

		TELEVISION MAN
		(Indicating the front
		door he has just
		come in through)
	You think they'll take him out that
	way?

		POLICEMAN
		(Looking at waiting
		crowd, shrugging)
	Probably have to.
		(A rueful smile)
	Besides, the taxpayers hate it when
	something gets slipped out the back
	door on them!

Over this exchange, the buzz of other voices, the movement
of men. CAMERA MOVES ON, down the corridor, gets to the door
of the office of the Chief of Police just as a young fellow
with a carton box filled with paper containers of sent-out-
for coffee reaches this door. CAMERA HOLDS as the COFFEE BOY
pauses a moment, then goes into the room.

						CUT TO:

INT. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF POLICE - (NIGHT)

Lila is seated in a chair, Sam standing close by. A bit apart
from them, we see Sheriff Chambers, in quiet conference with
the CHIEF OF POLICE, the COUNTY SHERIFF, the DISTRICT
ATTORNEY.

The Coffee Boy stands in the doorway. Sam goes to him, takes
a container of coffee from the box, carries it to Lila,
checking the notation on the lid as he goes.

MED. CLOSE ON SAM AND LILA

		SAM
		(quietly)
	It's regular. Okay?

		LILA
		(ruefully)
	I could stand something regular.

Sam smiles encouragingly, hands her the coffee. Sheriff
Chambers ENTERS SHOT, gives Sam a container of coffee he has
brought for him. Sam takes it, nods a thank you.

For a moment no one speaks. Lila looks badly shaken, Sam
disheveled, but contained.

		CHAMBERS
	You two can go on home if you like.
		(a sympathetic look
		at Lila)
	Making that statement was enough for
	one night.

		SAM
		(to Lila)
	Want to?

		LILA
	No. I'm all right. I'll feel better
	when all this is explained... if it
	can be.

Sam looks a question at Sheriff Chambers. Chambers shrugs
doubtfully.

		CHAMBERS
	If anybody gets any answers, it'll
	be the fellow talking to him now...
	the Psychiatrist. Even I couldn't
	reach Norman... and he knows me.
		(to Lila)
	You warm enough, Miss?

Lila is about to answer, when she sees someone come into the
room and rises anxiously. Sam and Sheriff Chambers turn,
follow her gaze.

INT. OFFICE OF CHIEF OF POLICE - FULL SHOT

A young man with a serious, frowning face has just come into
the room. He is DR. SIMON, the Psychiatrist.

He goes to the desk where the box of coffee containers has
been placed, takes up a container.

		DISTRICT ATTORNEY
	Did he talk to you?

		SIMON
	No. I got the whole story... but not
	from Norman. I got it from... his
	mother.

Everyone gazes at him, mystified. He speaks as he removes
lid from coffee container.

		SIMON
	Norman Bates no longer exists. He
	only half-existed to begin with...
	now, the other half has taken over.
	Probably for all time.

		LILA
		(With difficulty)
	Did he kill my sister?

		SIMON
	Yes... and no.

		DISTRICT ATTORNEY
	Look, if you're trying to lay a lot
	of psychiatric groundwork for some
	sort of plea this fellow would like
	to cop...

		SIMON
	A psychiatrist doesn't lay the
	groundwork .. he merely tries to
	explain it.

		LILA
	But my sister is...

		SIMON
	Yes. I'm sorry.
		(to Chambers)
	The Private Investigator, too. If
	you drag that swamp somewhere in the
	vicinity of the motel...
		(To the Chief of Police)
	Have you any unsolved missing persons
	cases on your books?

		CHIEF OF POLICE
	Yes. Two.

		SIMON
	Young girls?

		CHIEF OF POLICE
		(nods, astounded,
		then:)
	Did he confess to...

		SIMON
		(interrupting)
	As I said, the mother...
		(Pauses, goes on afresh)
	To understand it, as I understood it
	hearing it from the mother...  That
	is, from the mother-half of Norman's
	mind, you have to go back ten years...
	to the time when Norman murdered his
	mother and her lover.
		(A pause, then as no
		one interrupts)
	He was already dangerously disturbed,
	had been ever since his father died.
	His mother was a clinging, demanding
	woman... and for years the two of
	them lived as if there was no one
	else in the world. Then she met a
	man and it seemed to Norman she "threw
	him over" for this man. That pushed
	him over the thin line... and he
	killed them both. Matricide is
	probably the most unbearable crime
	of all... and most unbearable to the
	son who commit it. So he had to erase
	the crime, at least in his own mind.
		(A pause)
	He stole her corpse... and a weighted
	coffin was buried. He hid the body
	in the fruit cellar, even "treated"
	it to keep it as well as it would
	keep. And that still wasn't enough.
	She was there, but she was a corpse.
	So he began to think and speak for
	her, gave her half his life, so to
	speak. At times he could be both
	personalities, carry on
	conversations... at other times, the
	mother-half took over completely. He
	was never all Norman, but he was
	often only mother. And because he
	was so pathologically jealous of
	her, he assumed she was as jealous
	of him. Therefore, if he felt a strong
	attraction to any other woman, the
	mother side of him would go wild.
		(To Lila)
	When Norman met your sister, he was
	touched by her... and aroused by
	her. He wanted her. And this set off
	his "jealous mother" and...  "mother
	killed the girl." After the murder,
	Norman returned as if from a deep
	sleep... and like a dutiful son,
	covered up all traces of the crime
	he was convinced his mother had
	committed.

		SAM
	Why was he... dressed like that?

		DISTRICT ATTORNEY
	He's a transvestite!

		SIMON
	Not exactly. A man who dresses in
	woman's clothing in order to achieve
	a sexual change... or satisfaction...
	is a transvestite.  But in Norman's
	case, he was simply doing everything
	possible to keep alive the illusion
	of his mother being alive. And
	whenever reality came too close,
	when danger or desire threatened
	that illusion, he'd dress up, even
	to a cheap wig he brought, and he'd
	walk about the house, sit in her
	chair, speak in her voice... He tried
	to be his mother.
		(A sad smile)
	And now he is.
		(A pause)
	That's what I meant when I said I
	got the story from the mother. She
	thinks Norman has been taken away...
	because of his crimes.  She insists
	she did nothing, that Norman committed
	all the murders just to keep her
	from being discovered. She even smiled
	a bit coquettishly as she said that.
	Of course, she feels badly about
	it... but also somewhat relieved to
	be, as she put it, free of Norman,
	at last.
		(A pause)
	When the mind houses two
	personalities, there is always a
	battle. In Norman's case, the battle
	is over... and the dominant
	personality has won.

Lila begins to weep softly, for Mary, for Arbogast, for
Norman, for all the destroyed human beings of this world.
Sam bends beside her, puts his arm about her, comforts her.

		CHAMBERS
		(To Simon)
	And the forty thousand dollars?  Who
	got that?

		SIMON
	The swamp. These were murders of
	passion, not profit.

A POLICE GUARD puts his head in the door, speaks, in a near-
whisper, to the Chief of Police. The Guard is carrying a
folded blanket over his arm.

		POLICE GUARD
	He feels a little chill... can I
	bring him this blanket?

The Chief of Police nods. The Guard goes away, and CAMERA
FOLLOWS him out of the room and out into the hallway. Guard
moves through the waiting men, heading down the corridor.

						CUT TO:

INT. ANOTHER CORRIDOR IN COURTHOUSE

A narrower corridor in the rear of the building. In f.g. of
shot, we see a door, the top half of which is wire-covered
glass. A GUARD in uniform is posted by the door, looking
reprovingly at the two or three people trying to get a glance
into the room.

The Police Guard, carrying the blanket, comes down this
corridor, goes to the door. CAMERA MOVES CLOSE. The uniformed
Guard opens the door, allows the man to go in.

Shot is RAKED so that we can not see into the room.

After a moment, the Guard comes out and the uniformed Guard
closes and locks the door and we

						CUT TO:

INT. NORMAN'S DETENTION ROOM - (NIGHT)

The walls are white and plain. There is no window.

There is no furniture except the straight-back chair in which
Norman sits, in the center of the room. The room has a quality
of no-whereness, of calm separation from the world.

The Police Guard has placed the blanket on Norman's knees.
Norman, as we come upon him, is lifting the blanket, unfolding
it. His face, although without makeup and without the
surrounding softness of the wig, has a certain femininity
about it, a softness about the mouth and a kind of arch
womanliness about the brows.

Calmly, Norman places the blanket about his shoulders, as if
it were a cashmere shawl. CAMERA REMAINS in a position so
that our view of Norman is a FULL ONE. When the shawl is in
position, and Norman is settled, we HEAR, OVER SHOT, the
voice of his mother, coming from the calm of his thoughts.

		MOTHER'S VOICE (O.S.)
	It's sad... when a mother has to
	speak the words that condemn her own
	son... but I couldn't allow them to
	believe that I would commit murder.
		(A pause)
	They'll put him away now... as I
	should have... years ago. He was
	always... bad. And in the end, he
	intended to tell them I killed those
	girls... and that man. As if I could
	do anything except just sit and
	stare... like one of his stuffed
	birds.
		(A pause)
	Well, they know I can't even move a
	finger. And I won't. I'll just sit
	here and be quiet. Just in case they
	do... suspect me.

A fly buzzes close, and then continues buzzing and flying
about Norman's face.

		MOTHER'S VOICE (V.O.)
	They're probably watching me.  Well,
	let them. Let them see what kind of
	a person I am.
		(A pause, as the fly
		lights on Norman's
		hand)
	I'm not going to swat that fly. I
	hope they are watching. They'll see...
	they'll see... and they'll know...
	and they'll say... 'why, she wouldn't
	even harm a fly...'

Norman continues to gaze ahead into nothing.

		   SCENE BEGINS TO DISSOLVE SLOWLY TO:

THE SWAMP

As END TITLES FADE IN, we see the swamp, the chain of a tow-
truck. The chain is attached to Mary's car. The car is coming
out of the swamp.

						FADE OUT

		THE END
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