On their divorce day Mason and Jessica erupt over his gambling and the cash meant for four-year-old Sophia's school. Mason pleads to borrow money, promising to pay double; a sudden dangerous moment forces Jessica to save him. Shocked, he repeatedly apologizes and vows to stop gambling. At City Hall Mason then experiences a vision of the near future — he can see what will happen in a month and his wife is alive — while Jessica reveals $820,000 in debts to be split and begs to keep Sophia. Mason is left to decide with his new ability looming.
At a tense dinner, Jessica begs Mason not to divorce, apologizing repeatedly while their daughter Sophia cries in pain. Mason grows impatient; a creditor's threat erupts—someone even threatens to sell Sophia to cover debts—revealing an $800,000 obligation due in seven days. Jessica confesses a past blow left her able to see the future and vows to change. Mason rejects hollow apologies, agrees to hide the split from his aging parents for now, and forces a condition: if the $800K is repaid within a week, would she win him back and remarry him?
Mason, who can now see the near future, intends to use his power to make money and protect his family. At a repayment meeting, creditor Mr. Lee demands payment next week. Mason warns that Harvey's car was tampered with and will crash in ten minutes. Lee scoffs and threatens to collect, but Mason insists "Don't get in this car," urges a check, and promises to pay in a week while seeking startup cash from the rescue. Lee dismisses him. With minutes left, Mason proposes a bet, leaving Harvey's fate and Mason's repayment plan unresolved.
After a bold wager, Mason confidently claims he can predict an outcome and risks his debt: if he's right he gets $100K; if wrong his $800K debt becomes $900K. Someone takes the bet. Proof comes when Mr. Lee is warned his car's fuel tank was sabotaged and will explode if it runs more than ten minutes. He insists he wasn't the saboteur and orders police and security footage pulled. Onlookers applaud the predictor. The episode ends with the team reviewing camera feeds to find who tried to harm Mr. Lee, the culprit still unknown.
Mason learns his $800K+ company debt is recorded and can't be erased, but Harvey—calling himself 'brother'—offers to defer it, charges no interest, and quietly transfers $100,000. That deposit gives Mason seed capital and hope to repay debts, but he still needs a place to stay. He returns to his family; a daughter still worries about him despite his rough treatment, while his father angrily rebukes Mason, calling him a 'worthless beast' and saying he doesn't deserve such a wonderful daughter. Harvey's help buys time, but family rejection leaves Mason's next move unresolved.
At a platform, Sophia tearfully tells her father not to worry and to wait for her as he insists he's fine. Minutes later the news erupts: top star Joseph is slammed by paparazzi for fan affairs, public smoking and lip-syncing, and concert tickets crash to $100. Fans demand refunds and the hype collapses. Amid the chaos, Mason phones a colleague who asks how to “make big bucks,” urging a buy-low scheme to snap up discounted Joseph tickets. The episode closes on that offer, leaving the colleague undecided about committing to the risky plan.
After Joseph is exposed for multiple scandals and his concert may be canceled, a man and Harvey spot cheap tickets and decide to scalp them. Despite warnings that scalping invites disaster and a sabotaged car from yesterday, one man insists, "Because I can read the future," and persuades Harvey to join. At the box office they place shocking bulk orders—first a thousand, then five thousand tickets—while sellers and bystanders call them fools. The key turn is Harvey's committed buy; the episode ends with them leaving loaded with tickets and the concert's fate still hanging.
Street vendors hawk Joseph concert tickets as Mason quietly clears rumors, allowing him and Harvey to scalp sales. They boast they turned a $100K stake into $2M, celebrate the profit and regret not risking the full $2M while running cash-for-tickets stalls. The episode then cuts to Jessica at a counter: she kept a little for living expenses and used the remaining $3K to repay Mason's debts. When someone asks, "He hits and yells at you, yet you're paying his debts?" Jessica is left to face that accusation with no answer, the personal cost unresolved.
Jessica faces friends urging her to end her marriage and goes to see Mr. Lee after rumors of his divorce. At the gathering men ogle her and note his wealth. Payment is due in seven days, and someone asks, "If I repay the $800K within a week, would you remarry me?" Jessica accuses Mason of selling her to Mr. Lee. Though divorced, she says he won't let her go. She tells Mason, "I hate you," then threatens, "If you won't let me live, I'll die right before your eyes." Bystanders cry "Don't!" as her next move stays unknown.
On the brink of divorce, Mason finally sees how selfish and hurtful he has been. He cannot stop his wife from leaving. In the shock of loss he accidentally gains a terrifying gift: the power to predict the future. He watches prices surge and markets bend to his calculations; real estate, stocks and global trends become tools in his hands. Wealth comes fast, but the void remains. Success raises the question he never faced before: what is worth buying back? Years later a reporter confronts Mason: "You're now super rich. What do you want most?" He answers with quiet urgency: "I just want to give my wife and kid the best life possible." Regret, power, and longing converge.