Kevin’s the only Rayburn who will be physically punished for his crimes by serving jail time and this time, we don’t think John will be able to bail him out. But the scheme flops because Belle forgets to turn off the GPS on her phone, and they’re discovered in no time, apprehended mid-beer at some island joint. After the feds catch wind of his involvement in a drug-running operation, he and Belle and their baby escape to Bimini, colluding with John to fake out the cops that they’re enroute to Cuba. The dumbest, unluckiest Rayburn, Kevin (Norbert Leo Butz) meets an appropriately dumb and unlucky end. John stands up to her, saying “You had no idea what family was.” Looks like she’s set to live out her remaining years drunk, miserable and alone. After she learns that selling the inn is no longer a viable option, because it’ll be under water in ten years (thanks, Trump!), she proceeds to get wasted and rant to Kevin and John that “the sea takes everything” and point the finger at them as the reason why her life is ruined. The shifty Rayburn matriarch (played by Sissy Spacek) has an ugly end. Running away may have given her physical distance from her toxic family, but mentally she can’t keep them out. Raybound is a short adventure where you are a textureless square that must go on a quest to find yourself. She’s still drinking heavily and having the same recurring nightmare where someone’s breaking into the Rayburn Inn and she can’t bolt the doors. But she’s far from contented in her new life, and we aren’t sure if she’ll ever be. When John visits her to see if she’ll come back to testify in the trial over Marco’s death, she declines. Last we see her, she’s run off to California, where she now goes by “Amy,” sports a crazy goth back tattoo, and has a whole new set of friends. Sadly, our girl Meg (Linda Cardellini) doesn’t even appear in the final two episodes. As we say farewell to the very bingeable Netflix show, here’s where we leave Meg, Kevin and Sally and what we think lies ahead for them (it doesn’t look good). Their respective fates are all pretty bleak - and appropriately so, as they never owned up to their culpability, instead perpetuating their guilt with lies and cover-ups. I failed him.” Oh, Lenny Potts is one good dude I think.There are no easy outs for any of the Rayburn clan. Somebody needed to stand up and tell the truth. Lenny confronted Robert a few months later, but Robert always denied it and their friendship fell apart. Lenny feels guilty that he never pressed the issue and that he failed Danny. The three kids all stuck to the same cover story. “I always thought it was an odd time to take a trip,” says Lenny. Interesting, it turns out Sally was out of town. Lenny knew it wasn’t right, which is when he talked to the rest of the Rayburn gang. Lenny admits he made a mistake to talk to them together and so had to swallow the hit by a car lie. The events of season two have chipped away at his supposition that the Rayburn. But John’s great at lying, especially to himself. Lenny says what we suspected: Sarah drowned and when Lenny went to the hospital Robert was there with battered Danny. At the time, John was a little more convinced by his own words. John is still upset about giving a false statement to him when he was a kid. John and Lenny Potts sit on a bench and things get real.
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