When his mother took a lover, Bates went over the edge with jealousy and poisoned them both, forging a suicide note in his mother's handwriting. Bates and his mother had lived together in a state of total codependence ever since his father's death. Sam enters the room and subdues him before he can harm Lila.Īt the police station, Sam talks to a psychiatrist who had examined Bates, and learns that, years before, Bates had murdered his mother and her lover. As she screams, a figure rushes into the room with a knife-Norman Bates, dressed in his mother's clothes. Bates' mummified corpse in the fruit cellar. At the house, Lila is horrified to discover Mrs. Bates then knocks Sam unconscious with a bottle. During a conversation with Sam, Bates says that his mother had only pretended to be dead, and had communicated with him while he was in the institution, Bates then tells Sam that Lila tricked him and went up to the house and that his mother was waiting for her. Sam distracts Bates while Lila goes to get the sheriff-but she actually proceeds up to the house to investigate on her own. Sam and Lila go the motel to investigate. The young Norman had a nervous breakdown after finding them and was sent for a time to a mental institution. Bates has been dead for years, having committed suicide by poisoning her lover and herself. Sam and Lila go to Fairvale to look for Arbogast, and meet with the town sheriff, who tells them that Mrs. When he enters the house, the same mysterious figure who killed Mary ambushes him and kills him with a razor. This arouses Arbogast's suspicion, and he calls Lila and tells her that he is going to try to talk to Mrs. Arbogast eventually meets up with Bates, who says that Mary had left after one night when he asks to talk with his mother, Bates refuses.
Sam and Lila agree to let Arbogast lead the search for Mary. They are soon joined by Milton Arbogast, a private investigator hired by Mary's boss to retrieve the money. Meanwhile, Mary's sister, Lila, comes to Fairvale to tell Sam of her sister's disappearance. His mother comes to comfort him, and he decides to dispose of Mary's body and go on with life as usual. He briefly considers letting her go to prison, but changes his mind after having a nightmare in which she sinks in quicksand, only to turn into him as she goes under. He is instantly convinced his mother is the murderer. Moments later in the shower, however, a figure resembling an old woman surprises her with a butcher knife, and beheads her.īates, who had passed out drunk after dinner, returns to the motel and finds Mary's corpse. Mary says goodnight and returns to her room, resolving to return the money so she will not end up like Bates. Bates into a rage she screams, "I'll kill the bitch!", which Mary overhears.ĭuring dinner, Mary gently prods Bates about his lack of a social life and suggests that he put his mother in a mental institution, but he vehemently denies that there is anything wrong with her "We all go a little crazy sometimes", he states. Exhausted, she accepts Bates' invitation to have dinner with him at his house-an invitation that sends Mrs. Mary arrives at the Bates Motel after accidentally turning off the main highway. She stole the money so her boyfriend, Sam Loomis, could pay off his debts and they could get married. Mary is on the run after impulsively stealing $40,000 from a client of the real estate company where she works. In the middle of a heated argument between them, a customer arrives, a young woman named Mary Crane. They run a small motel together in the town of Fairvale but business has floundered since the state relocated the highway. Norman Bates is a middle-aged bachelor who is dominated by his mother, a mean-tempered, puritanical old woman who forbids him to have a life away from her.