Shay, a blind woman, is accosted on a rainy street but surprises her attackers by using military combat training to fight them off and warn them by sound. Later, after a delivery, a courier gives her a rose and offers a ride; she orders a driver and gets into a car that smells of lavender. She's offered water but won't drink. During the ride a late-night bulletin reports three young women murdered at night and the suspect still at large. When someone asks, "Why aren't you drinking the water?" the question leaves immediate danger unresolved.
Inside a moving car, a passenger grows carsick and urgently begs the driver to open a window, pull over, or let her use a gas station restroom. The driver keeps saying they’ll arrive soon and delays, then unexpectedly shifts the conversation — he asks, "Do you like roses?" and promises a big bouquet, which confuses her. As she presses him harder, unable to wait, the scene jumps to a different voice: an Uber driver calling to ask where she is and saying he’s been waiting. The episode ends with the passenger’s location and the driver’s intentions unresolved.
Shay, who is blind and habitually leaves the lights on, wakes groggy after being sedated and realizes she's been kidnapped by a killer. Disoriented, she calls Kit and says, "I've been kidnapped by a killer." Kit tells her to stay calm, hide, and says he has her location before rushing to rescue. Meanwhile the kidnapper prowls, taunting her—"I know this area well... I see you"—searching nearby. The episode pivots when Kit locks onto her GPS and speeds to the coordinates as the abductor closes in; Shay’s silence and hiding will decide if help arrives in time.
A woman hides as a man searches the room, shouting "Come out! I see you!" He flatters her—"My little rose"—and eerily explains he turned others "into something eternal" to restore purity, even mentioning a first girlfriend who liked roses. The woman notices his breathing doesn't match his heartbeat and thinks he's bluffing because he can't pinpoint her. He promises, "I won't kill you," and offers alternatives, while another voice asks, "She's not here?" Then someone finds her: "Ah, there you are." The episode ends with her concealment blown and the search reaching her.
Someone addresses Shay with a tender 'My little rose' and then asks, 'can't you hear me?' When Shay doesn't answer, the speaker's tone flips to alarm. Repeated shouts of 'Shay!' fill the space as another person asks, 'Are you okay?' The scene accelerates through mounting calls and frantic repetition, but no response comes. Each attempt to rouse Shay fails to yield information about her condition. The episode ends with persistent, unanswered cries for Shay, leaving her condition unknown and the immediate crisis unresolved.
Blind eyewitness Ms. Langley tells police the driver she encountered is a serial killer but offers no hard proof. Using footsteps, chair sounds and scent she profiles him: about 35, roughly 6 ft 1 in, heavyset, calluses on his right index and thumb, recent hair loss (minoxidil scent), scratch marks, and a faint lavender odor masking formaldehyde and blood. She notes frequently cleaned seats and a dull engine, identifying a Nissan Sylphy, while an officer insists it looks like a black Audi A6L. Police record her detailed account but demand independent confirmation, leaving the lead unresolved.
After giving her statement, Shay is told Captain Harris and his team will handle the investigation. Shay insists her sensory evidence matters—she escaped a psychopath by listening, smelled blood in his car and felt scratches on him—but officials lean on a bystander's brief sighting of a taillight. Kit, who saved her, reassures her and says he believes her but warns engine sounds can be mistaken and the police may head the wrong way. Shay thanks Kit and tells him not to worry, while whether her testimony will be trusted and the investigation's direction remains unresolved.
A woman catches a lavender scent and panics: "How did he find me? He knows where I live." It's late and the street is empty, so fear becomes urgent. Someone nearby keeps urging, "Faster. Please, faster," as she hurries to move or hide. The key turn arrives when an unseen voice softly says, "My little rose," an intimate line that indicates someone has reached her or closed the distance. The episode ends on that address, leaving her immediate fate unresolved as the voice draws near.
Shay Langley, a former commando now blind and working as a massage therapist, accidentally boards a rideshare driven by serial killer Jordan Cullen on a rainy night. Her sharpened senses and combat instincts reveal his danger and she fights her way free. Jordan becomes obsessively fixated and stalks her with escalating threats. When police doubt Shay's contradictory testimony, she and delivery worker Kit investigate and learn the killer operates multiple vehicles. Shay agrees to be bait, luring Jordan into a trap, then uses darkness, sound and training to overpower him. After his arrest, Shay becomes a criminal investigation consultant and Kit an auxiliary officer; together they turn survival into a mission for justice.
Shay Langley, a former commando now blind and working as a massage therapist, accidentally boards a rideshare driven by serial killer Jordan Cullen on a rainy night. Her sharpened senses and combat instincts reveal his danger and she fights her way free. Jordan becomes obsessively fixated and stalks her with escalating threats. When police doubt Shay's contradictory testimony, she and delivery worker Kit investigate and learn the killer operates multiple vehicles. Shay agrees to be bait, luring Jordan into a trap, then uses darkness, sound and training to overpower him. After his arrest, Shay becomes a criminal investigation consultant and Kit an auxiliary officer; together they turn survival into a mission for justice.