The Bay S02e02 Satrip [RECOMMENDED]

Jenn drives to the scene in the rain. The Farrow house is a cramped terraced cottage overlooking the old stone jetty. Inside: Lucy’s mother, , a hospice nurse with a calm that feels rehearsed. Her father, Paul Farrow (41) , a former merchant sailor now working onshore wind turbines, is pacing. He reeks of whiskey. Their older daughter, Ivy (16) , sits on the stairs, silent, her phone flashlight still on because she’s been checking the garden every seven minutes.

Her phone buzzes. Maisie: “Can we get takeout? I miss you.”

The local uniform says: “No sign of abduction. No forensic evidence at the pickup point. She just… vanished.” The investigation, led by DS Karen Hobson (still sharp, still exhausted), quickly turns inward. Lucy was last seen leaving the art club with a woman. Description: dark hair, blue coat, not matching Clara. When shown CCTV, Clara’s face goes white. “That’s my sister,” she whispers. Nina (42) , estranged for six years. Nina was the artistic one. Lucy adored her. But Nina has a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia, untreated. Two years ago, she accused Paul of something unspeakable—a memory that Clara refuses to articulate, even to Jenn. the bay s02e02 satrip

Jenn calls it in. “I think Nina believes she’s saving Lucy from something. A ritual. A trip. She wrote ‘Satrip.’”

Jenn sits in her car outside Maisie’s school. She sees her daughter laughing with Chloe, then lying to a teacher about where she was last night. Jenn doesn’t intervene. She starts the engine. She drives home. Jenn drives to the scene in the rain

Sasha explains: “Satrip. St. Adrian’s. They used to take us to the shore. They said the salt would strip the bad selves away. But it doesn’t strip. It just… buries.”

Jenn digs. She finds a small private psychiatric facility, closed in 2019, called — “Satrip” as an acronym. And there, buried in archived patient files, is a second daughter: Nina Farrow (born 1979) , admitted age 16, diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder. The records show that Nina did die—but her alternate identity, a protective alter named “Sasha” , may have been the one who walked out of the tide that day, while Nina’s core consciousness drowned. Her father, Paul Farrow (41) , a former

The shell drops. The tide is at their knees. Sasha weeps. By the time the rescue boat arrives, Sasha is holding Lucy on her lap, singing a lullaby from a childhood that never happened. Three weeks later.