:33:01
	Do you want some breakfast?
:33:02
	No...
:33:03
	Thanks, I can't stay
:33:06
	I just came to bring you
some papers to sign
:33:09
	Permission to...
:33:12
	take some things off the
premises that kind of thing
:33:14
	Who is it, Kris?
:33:16
	It's the historian...
:33:18
	the phone call
:33:20
	Can you tell me about
my family?
:33:22
	You want some pancakes?
:33:24
	How are you doing?
:33:27
	I need to spend some time
with Mr.Butterfield
:33:30
	So I will be with you
in a minute
:33:32
	Sure, no problem
:33:37
	I need to...
:33:38
	What can you tell me
about the house?
:33:40
	The house...
:33:43
	The house was once owned
by a man named Covington
:33:48
	A horrible man evidently
:33:50
	He wasn't...?
:33:52
	Your relative?
No...
:33:54
	Why was he so horrible?
:33:56
	There was a lot of talk
about disappearing children
:34:00
	ritual sacrifice,
that kind of thing
:34:03
	Of course, all this was
in the 1600s
:34:06
	People did say those kinds
of things those days
:34:10
	Still the evidence
is rather compelling
:34:14
	What happened to him?
:34:15
	How did we get the house?
:34:17
	He disappeared
:34:20
	quite suddenly, mysteriously
:34:22
	No one was very surprised or
too upset for that matter
:34:27
	And then your ancestor
Katherine Miller
:34:30
	she bought the house
:34:33
	Her daughter was one of
those who disappeared
:34:43
	Are you all right, Miss?
:34:48
	This is just the first time
I am hearing any of this
:34:52
	What I came to tell you
about is that
:34:54
	I do have some letters
:34:56
	Well, one long letter
actually written by your
:34:59
	great grandmother in 1674