He makes the connection and realizes that his daughter is dead. However, he sees Sheriff Truman enter the hotel to see him. Palmer is then taken aside by hotel concierge Julie for a phone call from his wife, clearly worried about Laura and he tries to calm her. They plan to take over the Packard Sawmill land and to have a group of Norwegian businessmen led by Sven Jorgenson and accompanied by a translator to invest in the project.
Sarah calls the field office, reaching the football coach, Max Hartman, who tells her that Bobby had not yet shown up for practice and had been late for several weeks straight.Īudrey Horne leaves for school from her home at the Great Northern Hotel, and her father, Benjamin Horne discusses the Ghostwood Development Project with Leland Palmer, Laura's father. Betty gives Sarah the phone number to the school's field office to possibly reach Bobby, as he was supposed to be at football practice. She asks Bobby's mother Betty if their children were together, but she does not know. She calls the home of Laura's boyfriend, Bobby Briggs. After receiving no answer, she searches the house for her daughter but does not find her.
Laura's mother, Sarah calls for her to come down. He informs Truman of his discovery and the sheriff makes his way to Martell's home, telling Lucy to have Doctor Will Hayward and Deputy Andy Brennan-Lucy's on-and-off boyfriend-meet him there.Īfter the deputy breaks down crying whilst taking pictures of the scene, Truman and Hayward turn over the body, discovering that it is Laura Palmer, a popular high school student. He calls the Twin Peaks Sheriff's Department, where he is transferred by receptionist Lucy Moran to Sheriff Harry S. However, he notices an object by the shore, and when he approaches it, he discovers that it is a dead body wrapped in plastic. On the morning of Februin the Washington town of Twin Peaks, Pete Martell leaves his home-the Blue Pine Lodge, where he lives with his wife Catherine Martell and her sister-in-law, Josie Packard-to go fishing. The one leading to the many is Laura Palmer. It is a story of many, but begins with one - and I knew her. To introduce this story, let me just say it encompasses the all- it is beyond the "fire", though few would know that meaning. Yet they all have about them a sense of mystery - the mystery of life. Some of them are stories of madness, of violence.