Unlike many procedurals that start with a dead body, Episode 3 opens with a living, breathing nightmare. The missing witness, a young marine biologist named Chloe, is found hiding in a drainage culvert. Her testimony to DS Townsend is the core of the episode. She describes the killer’s modus operandi: he uses a modified fishing boat to lure his victims to isolated spots along the bay.

Whether you are a collector of high-efficiency video files or just a fan of British crime drama looking to catch up, seeking out ensures you experience the episode exactly as the director intended: dark, detailed, and dangerously addictive.

In the end, this installment reads like a study in restraint. It trusts the audience to keep pace with subtlety and rewards attention with an emotional accrual that feels earned. The bay itself — whether literal or metaphorical — remains as inscrutable as the water: deceptively calm at one glance, moving with complex currents beneath. S05E03 doesn’t shout its stakes; it lets them arrive, quietly and inevitably, like the tide.

: Still reeling from her father's recent death, Jenn's personal and professional lives clash. Her partner, Chris, becomes increasingly frustrated with her absence, eventually requiring Jenn's mother, Anne Jackson