Don looks like an unshaven mess, maybe he's been working too much. Megan asks him to stay home as a favor to her and he does. While Don is at home, don's ex-wife Betty calls and says that she needs to talk about their daughter Sally.

Don sits right up with a worried face, wondering if Sally has said anything about catching Don in bed with the neighbor downstairs. Betty says that Sally isn't coming to see Don anymore, and that she'll likely head out to boarding school.

Apparently it's Sally's choice to head out to the girls' school. Sally gets driven out to the school and gets to spend a night there just to scope it out. The girls there are feeling her out, seeing what kind of person she is. They're pretty upset that Sally didn't show up with alcohol or any other party favors, so Betty calls up her male friend who shows up with weed and a bottle of vodka.

Thanks to Sally's hook up, the girls act favorably towards her and .. They spend part of the night drinking and smoking joints in their small dorm room, and it suddenly ends when one of the boys they snuck into their room makes a few unwanted advances towards Sally. After leaving, Sally seems to have had a good time and seems to think of going to the girls school as a good thing.

Ken Cosgrove is out on a hunting trip with the fat cats of Chevy when one of them shoots Ken in the face, much like the real-life Dick Cheney incident.

Ken shows up back in New York wearing an eye patch, and says he's through going to Michigan. Luckily for Pete Campbell, the opportunity to fill in for Ken on the Chevy account fell right on his lap.

Ken delegates duties to Pete to handle Chevy. In a meeting with the partners about Pete getting in on Chevy, and Bob Benson is sitting in. In the previous episode, Bob made a gay-looking advance towards Pete, and Pete was obviously distraught.

Bob had helped handle the Chevy account also, but Pete says he wants Bob off the team-- he wants to bring in his own people. None of the partners agree, so Pete defers to them.

Outside of the meeting, Pete tells Benson he doesn't want to work with him or spend time with him after he professed his love. Pete calls him sick.

Benson is now very upset, and is ranting in Spanish on the phone to someone, probably the Spaniard that was taking care of Pete's mother.

It is peculiar that he's speaking Spanish, but it soon gets revealed why. Pete hires a former co-worker to dig up a history on Benson, and it comes back that most of his story was fabricated, much like Don Draper's. Pete's friend says he's never seen anything like it, but Pete says he has-- referring to Don.

Pete goes into Bob's office to talk to him. He knows that the firm generally looks the other way when it comes to fake identity, so he offers apologies to Bob. Pete says he knows he's a fraud, but hopes that they can work together... As long as he keeps his hands off him.

Don and Megan are out at the movies on Don's day off. Turns out Peggy Olson and Ted Chaough are also there together. Megan tells Don how it's so obvious they have something going on since the only reason they'd show up at a movie at five in the afternoon is so that people from work won't see them.

The Ocean Spray and Sunkist conflict is still brewing, and it seems to be a source of fuel to the Don Draper and Ted Chaough rivalry. Don's boy Harry calls from Los Angeles and says that Ocean Spray is ready to dish out a few million dollars for a TV ad campaign that focuses on color TV.

Also, Don sabotaged a casting call that Ted and Peggy were responsible for. He did it after finding out that the $10,000 to run the casting was coming out of Sterling Cooper's tab.

Peggy walks into Don's office, and is pretty upset. She knows Don said something to Ted about the two of them. Don is just having a drink and shrugging everything she says off. She walks out after calling Don a monster.