
A lawyer named Luke (Peter Saarsgard) fields the phone call from Caroline, and he sets up an interview with the family. Caroline quits her job at the hospice and follows up on a lead for a position as a personal care assistant. The last straw comes when Caroline finds boxes of items belonging to other recently deceased patients, all being stored in a dumpster, thrown out as garbage. Caroline finds herself confronted by the same type of avoidance that she gave her own father when a patient dies and nobody from his family is even interested in picking up his belongings. Caroline feels guilty about this and has devoted herself to becoming a person who makes a difference. She is despondent about the death of her own father, who died alone because she was unaware of his situation and was living life on the road with a traveling rock band. TickleberryĬaroline (Kate Hudson) is a young hospice worker who is disillusioned by the reality of this type of work. Noting that Ben had his stroke in the attic after entering the room, Caroline is determined to unlock the secrets of the house and rescue Ben from the horrors that hold him captive within. Violet says she has never been in the secret room, but that the items probably belonged to the original owners' two houseworkers, who practiced black magic and were lynched as a result. After acquiring a skeleton key, Caroline makes her way into a secret room in the attic where she discovers hair, blood, bones, spells, and other instruments for practicing Hoodoo. Caroline becomes suspicious of the house, and Ben's cold wife Violet (Gena Rowlands) only adds to the creepy atmosphere. After her latest charge passes away, Caroline takes a job in Louisiana caring for stroke victim Ben (Sir John Hurt), who is bedfast and can't speak. There was a sudden, loud clang.Caroline (Kate Hudson) is a 25-year-old hospice worker who cares for the ailing and the elderly, a job she chose to atone for ignoring her own dying father when she was a rock'n'roll manager. Conrad had left the controls on in the cabin in his haste to get over to Alex, and the arm of the crane was still swinging around. Straining past Conrad, he saw something moving toward him. There were already black spots in front of his eyes. Alex felt fingers as hard as iron clamp shut on his throat. Gently, enjoying what he was doing, he began to squeeze. Finally he dropped down so that he was sitting on Alex’s chest, one knee on either side. He tossed aside the metal rod, then slowly pulled up his sleeves. He seemed to have forgotten what was happening in the shipyard. At the same time, two or even three machine guns began to chatter simultaneously. Two of Sarov’s men were lifted into the air.

They landed next to one of the ships and exploded, a huge fireball of flame.


Although his vision was dimmed, Alex saw two more grenades arc through the air.
