
The week begins at the cliff house as the truth finally comes out. Miss Dylan arrives with Electra and Will, visibly trembling but determined. Steffy answers the door with confusion, Finn standing behind her with a curious frown. From the moment Miss Dylan steps inside, Finn senses something is off — her voice shakes, her hands won’t stay still, and she keeps glancing toward Will and Electra for strength.
As the tension escalates, the name ‘Finn Spirals’ echoes in their minds, representing the turmoil and confusion that now surrounds them.
Miss Dylan takes a breath and admits she has a confession, and the air in the room shifts. She tells them she was the one who accidentally hit Luna with her car the night Luna escaped. The room goes still.

Miss Dylan Confesses — Steffy Accepts, Finn Snaps
Miss Dylan speaks softly, trying not to break down as she says she “never meant for any of it to happen.” She explains she panicked, she was scared, she didn’t know what she hit at first — and when she realized, she fell apart.
As the tension mounts, the conversation shifts towards the mysterious circumstances surrounding Finn Spirals’s involvement in the events that led to Luna’s death.
This event marked the beginning of what fans now refer to as the Finn Spirals — a series of dramatic twists that changed everything.
Steffy listens carefully, steady and composed. She nods slowly and tells her, in a calm soothing voice, that Luna put herself in danger. She tells Miss Dylan it wasn’t her fault, that accidents happen, and Luna created chaos that hurt many people. Steffy’s tone is gentle—reassuring even.
But Finn?
The moment Miss Dylan says the words “I killed Luna,” something inside him cracks.
His chest rises sharply, his eyes widen, his hands shake. He steps toward her, anger radiating through him. His voice breaks as he says through clenched teeth that she “took his daughter away from him,” a daughter he never got a chance to know outside of chaos. A daughter he might have forgiven someday.
Steffy turns to him when his voice rises. She tries to calm him, reaching for his arm, but he pulls away.
Miss Dylan keeps apologizing — endlessly, pathetically — but Finn can’t hear it. Rage fills the space where grief should go.
Electra is crying softly. Will is frozen. Steffy is stunned at the intensity of Finn’s reaction, whispering that Miss Dylan didn’t mean it.
Finn whispers, almost to himself, “I never got the chance… I never got one chance… and now she’s gone.”
His voice trembles. His anger isn’t directed only at Miss Dylan — it’s directed at fate, at Luna, at himself, at everything he never said or did.
Steffy says gently that Luna made her choices. But Finn looks at her as if he doesn’t recognize the coldness in her voice.
A dangerous emotional rift forms in that second.

Finn Begins to Crumble
The next scenes show Finn’s isolation. He goes quiet. Withdrawn. Walking through the house like a shadow. When Steffy asks if he’s okay, he says nothing. When she reaches for him, he steps back.
When he holds Hayes, his hands shake.
Steffy tells him he’s not responsible for Luna. That Luna brought darkness into their lives. But Finn whispers, “She was still mine.”
That sentence haunts the episode.
At work, Finn stares at Luna’s old medical file. His coworkers try to talk to him, and he avoids them. In one scene, he locks himself in the supply room and has a silent breakdown — fists pressed against his forehead, jaw shaking, tears escaping before he wipes them furiously away.

Steffy Notices the Change — But Finn Pulls Away
Steffy tries desperately to reconnect. She plans a family dinner, she talks about getting therapy together, she reminds him of all the pain Luna caused.
But Finn snaps back that the pain doesn’t erase “what could have been.”
When Steffy tells him he needs to let it go, Finn says quietly, “I don’t know how.”
That line confirms it — he’s losing his grip.

Finn Turns Somewhere Dangerous for Support
Late at night, Finn drives instead of coming home. He ends up parked outside Il Giardino. He sees Sheila through the window closing up the restaurant.
He tries to leave, but he can’t.
He gets out of the car.
When Sheila sees him walk in, she freezes — worried, confused, and hopeful all at once. She asks what’s wrong, and he tries to speak but his voice cracks.
Sheila puts a hand to her chest in shock — Finn hasn’t willingly approached her in months.
He tries to stay strong, but he breaks. He tells her he lost his daughter. That he feels emptiness he can’t explain. That he doesn’t know where else to go.
And Sheila — the one woman who never stops wanting him — steps closer. She lowers her voice and tells him he’s not alone, not anymore. She tells him she understands what losing a child does to a soul. Her voice is soft, trembling, emotional.
And Finn lets her comfort him.
He lets Sheila hold him as he cries.
This is the moment the audience sees it:
Finn is slipping into a dangerous emotional dependence on Sheila.
And it’s only just beginning.

