But as Amanda reads further, she learns that this is no ordinary perfume: Fey had added several poisonous ingredients to it that causes people to act strangely and violently, among other things.
As Christina returns to The Closet, she shows off a dress, which once belonged to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, to Betty that she plans to sell in order get the needed money for Stuart's operation.
During the entire day Betty becomes more addicted to the perfume, even as she starts staring at her cell phone waiting for Henry to call.
Later that evening Betty starts acting more delusional by walking toward Gio's deli, taking a trashcan and throwing it at the shop's window.
As Amanda slaps Marc, she realizes that he is right, so she heads down to the courthouse and gives Betty the evidence that would result in Claire being found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity.
At the gynecologist's office Wilhelmina and Marc watch Christina get injected with Bradford's sperm, when all of a sudden Betty barges in.
"Odor in the Court" marked the end of one of the show's most on-again/off-again storylines: Who killed Fey Sommers, and with that Claire's career as a criminal.
While that one may have run its course, the question of other storylines featured in this episode, including Wilhelmina's "planned" pregnancy, the Betty/Henry/Gio triangle, Amanda's search for her father among them, are still up in the air.
On trial, Karen saved her friend Victoria Lord from being convicted of killing her pimp by admitting that she had been a prostitute to the entire town, including her faithful husband, who would later divorce her.
The second time around, Light became a recurring regular on NBC's Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, where she plays Judge Elizabeth Donnelly, who served as a Bureau Chief ADA in the Manhattan District Attorney's office before being appointed to the bench in Season 7.
A pair of fellow shows produced by ABC Studios got referenced in this episode, as Hilda and Justin mentioned Grey's Anatomy and Private Practice respectively.
And more important, that truth finally cleared up what exactly happened with Fey Sommers' death, a story line that the show has been following — sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse — since its launch a year and a half ago.
I don't know what you thought of the final revelations, TV watchers, but I'm totally fulfilled by the sensational wrap-up to the Fey-Bradford-Claire love triangle.