Vines, it prompts the question of when, exactly, he figured it out beforeDark Windsseason 3.
Vines, getting out on bail.
He made a rash decision, kidnapping Vines and driving him out into the desert.
Even thoughJoe didn’t physically kill B.J.
All throughDark Windsseason 3, Joe has been tormented by the Ye’iitsohentity and visions of B.J.
InDark Windsseason 3, however, he’s been more direct.
The two colleagues and friends don’t have to state it directly.
They know where it stands and what was done.
“Ain’t nothing to look into.
Vines, right?”
That’s not the last conversation Gordo and Joe have had about B.J.
Vines inDark Windsthis season, thanks to Joe not handling the guilt well.
Gordo knows, but he’s not going to admit to what he knows.
As a cop, Sheriff Sena understands plausible deniability.
Vines and left him to die in the desert has ramifications for far more people than just Joe.
And now that she knows, she’s also potentially criminally liable.
Gordo Sena is another character in a tight spot because of Joe’s actions.
Unlike Emma, Joe hasn’t directly confessed his crime to Gordo, but he doesn’t have to.
He was part of the initial B.J.
Vines investigation, and he’s Joe’s counterpart in the county.
Either way, inDark Windsseason 3, Gordo is the only one showing any sense at all.
Your Rating
Your comment has not been saved