As the spring semester at Baird College hurtles toward its inevitable conclusion in early 2026, the sixth episode of Season 3, “I Don’t Cry When I’m Sad Anymore,” transforms the campus into a landscape of dark lace and even darker intentions. Eschewing the traditional saccharine trappings of February 14th, the group converges on an “anti-Valentine’s Day” goth-themed party—a setting that perfectly mirrors the internal decay of their relationships. Directed with a focus on the “eroding trust” that has become the show’s hallmark, the episode moves from the performative rebellion of the party to the raw, visceral consequences of secrets that have finally outgrown their hiding places.
The Paranoia Game: Psychological Warfare at the Goth Party
The centerpiece of the episode is a high-stakes game of “Paranoia,” a drinking game that Stephen (Jackson White) weaponizes to systematically dismantle the group’s remaining alliances. The game, which involves whispering questions and revealing the “target” of the answer only if a drink is refused, becomes a psychological minefield. For Lucy (Grace Van Patten), the game is particularly agonizing as she navigates her growing fear of Stephen alongside her deepening, yet complicated, connection with Alex (Costa D’Angelo). Stephen’s introduction of a “new friend,” Tegan, serves as a calculated move to unsettle Lucy, signaling that he is already scouting his next victim.

The game reaches its cruelest peak when Bree (Catherine Missal) is asked who is most likely to commit suicide, and she names Wrigley (Spencer House). Given Wrigley’s recent history of profound personal loss and his fragile emotional state, the comment lands with devastating force. It is a moment that highlights the “casual cruelty” the group has adopted as a defense mechanism. While Bree immediately regrets the remark, the damage is done, further isolating Wrigley and pushing him toward a confrontation with his own internal demons.
The Brigley Kiss: A Long-Awaited Rapprochement
Despite the darkness of the evening, the episode finally delivers the moment “Brigley” shippers have anticipated since the season began. After a series of heated arguments throughout the night—sparked by Bree’s frustration with Evan and Wrigley’s resentment over being her “emotional dumping ground”—the two finally share a passionate, long-awaited kiss. The moment occurs after Wrigley takes Bree home from the party, and she admits that he is the only person she truly wants to talk to.

However, the kiss is far from a “happily ever after.” It is tinged with the guilt of Bree’s current relationship with Evan and the looming shadow of the 2015 wedding timeline. While the chemistry between House and Missal is undeniable, the show frames their connection as another “dangerous refuge”—a place where two people who have been through “pretty big things” seek solace in one another without ever fully addressing the wreckage they’ve left behind. For Wrigley, the kiss is a validation of his feelings, but for Bree, it is a complicated surrender to a desire she has spent years trying to suppress.
The Oliver Reveal: A Predator’s Pattern
While the party rages, Bree continues her investigation into the “other woman” in Professor Oliver’s (Tom Ellis) life. After a tense confrontation with Amanda, a fellow student, Bree learns a chilling detail: Amanda is only 17 and planning to go to Mexico for her 18th birthday. This revelation confirms that Oliver’s predatory behavior is not an isolated incident but a long-standing pattern of grooming minors. The weight of this information drives Bree to seek out Marianne (Gabriella Pession), Oliver’s wife, in a desperate attempt to find clarity.

In one of the episode’s most poignant scenes, Marianne offers Bree a level of comfort and understanding that her own mother has failed to provide. The exchange highlights the “immense amount of respect” the show has for the complexities of trauma and the ways in which women are often forced to find solidarity in the wake of male misconduct. As Bree grapples with the realization that she was just another cog in Oliver’s machine, her emotional baseline begins to shift, setting the stage for the “ruthless” decisions she will eventually make in the series finale.
Lucy’s Rock Bottom: The Walk to Stephen’s Door
The episode concludes with a chilling portrait of Lucy’s psychological unraveling. After a night spent trying to navigate her relationship with Alex—who is attempting to be “cognizant of her feelings” but remains frustrated by her self-destructive patterns—Lucy finds herself at her lowest point. Despite her attempts to flirt with others and project a sense of control, her subconscious leads her back to the very source of her misery. The final shot reveals Lucy standing in the lobby of Stephen’s apartment building, realizing with horror that she “didn’t actually walk home.”
This moment of “unconscious magnetism” underscores the theme of the episode: that trauma and toxicity create a cycle that is nearly impossible to break. As Diana (Alicia Crowder) finds her in the lobby and brings her into her room, the stage is set for a final, catastrophic collision of truths. With Stephen already having sent Diana’s nudes to her father as a “nuclear” act of revenge, and Lucy’s own confession tape looming over the campus, the episode makes it clear that at Baird College, Valentine’s Day isn’t about love—it’s about the “steady erosion” of everything the group once held dear.




