Addison Rowe is released—known as 113031—after serving time for taking the fall for her sister to save their father. Guards shove her out, warning her to leave and not look back. She finds her father and apologizes that she couldn't be the daughter he wanted. Though she thought she'd stopped loving Jensen, she admits she fell for him five years ago, he never loved her back, and she once carried his child after one night. Fate brings them together again in the city; as she moves toward him, someone shouts, "Stop right there!"
When Addison is stopped in public, Mr. Lott recognizes her and demands to know who let her out. She refuses to answer and pushes back, saying her sentence wasn’t over while onlookers jab at his public handiness and engaged status. The confrontation intensifies as his men press her and he reminders that five years behind bars have changed her—she declares, “I don't love you anymore.” Furious, Mr. Lott orders his staff to find whoever released her without permission. The episode ends with that search set in motion and their rupture unresolved.
Addison is blindsided when a woman tells her Jensen suddenly wants to get engaged to her and asks for Addy's blessing, while presenting Addison with a car meant to free her from Jensen’s help. The mood shifts when a different confrontation erupts: someone accuses Jensen of sending them to prison, calls them a murderer and dares him to kill them. As tensions peak between Jensen and his accuser, Addison collapses into shock. Medical staff rush in—doctors declare she must be saved now—leaving the engagement announcement and the prison accusation unresolved.
A woman is rushed to the hospital with needle marks, long-term malnutrition and severe complications after a childbirth four years ago; doctors warn a recent move almost killed her. The household fractures—some demand punishment while Old Mr. Lott and others recall she once loved Mr. Lott. Meanwhile Cyrus, the family's great-grandson, hysterically demands his mother and risks harm until great-grandpa promises she will return for his birthday. Frustrated by five years of no leads, Old Mr. Lott orders Walter to speed up the search, leaving her recovery and reunion unresolved.
Addison tells Jensen "I really like you," but soon a distraught Ms. Rowe explodes, accusing Jensen of wanting her dead and screaming, "Kill me!" Staff and a doctor rush in and sedate her; a medic calls it severe mental illness while Mr. Lott warns Jensen not to provoke her. Ms. Rowe insists she already spent five years in prison and deserves punishment. Addison then promises to bother Jensen for only a week; Jensen's silence becomes her acceptance. The episode closes with her vow and his quiet, but the debts she owes remain unresolved, leaving her fate uncertain.
Mr. Scott's vitals destabilize in the hospital, but staff later report he's out of danger. Jensen then confesses he hit Stella with his car, ran her over and fled, saying he deserves to lose everything. After being told his father is stable, Jensen visits the bedside and is confronted about leaving Stella unconscious. Instead of prison, the accuser imposes a penalty: "From now on, you'll be taking care of Stella until she wakes up." The episode ends with Jensen forced into daily care for Stella while her recovery remains unresolved.
Newly released from prison, Addy is ordered by Mr. Lott to care for Stella, but she refuses. A hospital invoice demands $20,000 by month’s end or her father's treatment will stop. Addy confronts her mother, Mrs. Rowe, who once promised to cover medical costs if Addy took the fall for Maya; Mrs. Rowe says she has no say. Lott's team continues searching for Cyrus' mother. Addy admits she engineered the morning billing incident. The episode closes with Addy forced to choose whether to accept Lott's demand to secure her father's care.
At a hospital bedside, a man confronts the attacker who put an old man on a sickbed; the attacker says "I've already done time for you" and warns he'll drag everyone down to protect your dad. The scene escalates when someone forces a confession about a car accident: the confessor admits stealing a Bentley, hitting someone, and reveals the car was a gift from Stella who tampered with it. They claim they put Stella in a coma and demand thanks; threats to tell Jensen are met with "go ahead." A child calls, "Mommy, is that you?" leaving the outcome unresolved.
A small child keeps calling "Mommy" after getting lost. Oliver comforts the child, makes a pinky promise—"three hundred years, no take-backs"—and offers to take the child home; someone calls for Cyrus and asks, "Is that your family?" Later, one person yields—"You win. I'll do as you say"—and is told to clean up, while another warns that caring for Stella will "only dirty her place." The episode ends when someone sees a newcomer and murmurs, "Why does this feel so familiar? Are you..." leaving recognition unresolved.
Ms. Rowe shows up to begin caring for Ms. Clarke but is immediately dragged into a hostile confrontation. An angry bystander stalls her, orders her to leave and hurls insults, then accuses a woman of secretly tampering with a car she had given as a gift. The accuser forces the issue: "If you had been driving that day, would you still be alive right now?" The scene pivots when Stella is directly accused—asked what she is hiding “behind that fake, beautiful face” and why it had to be her. The episode ends with Stella exposed and Rowe’s new role suddenly in jeopardy.