Contributor: John Keegan
Written by Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn
Directed by T. W. Peacocke
With Audrey now on a deadline, or so it seems, the character dynamics have definitely shifted. Audrey feels a greater sense of urgency, and that means that she’s less willing to worry over little things like maintaining good relationships. What starts with Duke trying to get Audrey to live a little turns into something very ugly by the end.
Meanwhile, the severity of the Troubles seems to be escalating, as we’re treated to a guy who extracts organs from other people, and not in a very clinical manner. Apparently Harry, the Troubled in question, knew that this would be coming, and that he’d require a steady supply of new compatible organs once his began to fail when the Troubles returned. And so he naturally made sure he had a large family with plenty of children with the organs he would need. (If the anti-Troubled gang needed a poster child for the “enemy”, this would be it.) Of course, since the Troubles are passed down generation to generation, those children also began having the same issue. And they were less discriminating, to say the least.
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