What Might Still Happen in Task

With Robbie’s arc closed in such a tragic and final way, Task moves into its last chapter carrying a new kind of tension — one rooted not in action, but in aftermath. Episode six served as both catharsis and reckoning, and now the question is no longer if there will be more losses, but who will make it to the end.

The world of Task has always been built on guilt, loyalty, and the weight of irreversible choices. Every surviving character carries something unresolved — and if the show remains true to its moral compass, redemption won’t be available to everyone.

Perry and Jayson: the fall of the empire

With Robbie gone, the Dark Hearts operation stands on shaky ground. Perry and Jayson remain as the last fragments of a doomed system, but the series has been clear: there is no peaceful way out for men who lived off blood and manipulation.

Jayson is impulsive, violent, and self-destructive — and that makes him vulnerable. After killing Robbie, he became the embodiment of chaos inside the gang. His end will likely be brutal, possibly at Tom’s hands, or as a consequence of his own brutality turning inward.

Perry, on the other hand, might try to survive by bargaining. He’s the strategist, the kind of villain who trades alliances to save himself. That makes a deal or an arrest plausible — survival without absolution. Still, Task has never been merciful to its sinners: Jayson’s fate seems destined for death, Perry’s for humiliation and loss of power.

Grasso: the traitor revealed

Grasso is the blind spot Tom still needs to expose. We already know he’s the informant who allowed Perry and Jayson to escape — the man indirectly responsible for Lizzie’s death. The finale must decide how his betrayal ends, and it won’t be a clean resolution.

There are two main routes: either he’s publicly unmasked and destroyed, or the guilt eats him alive, forcing him to confess or self-destruct. There’s also the possibility of a desperate deal — handing over the Dark Hearts leadership in exchange for leniency.

Yet in a show where loyalty defines survival, it’s hard to imagine Grasso walking away unpunished. His downfall will likely serve as a mirror to Tom’s own moral erosion — both men burdened by principles that no longer protect them.

Tom: The cost of truth

Tom has never been a conventional hero. He’s the man who keeps acting long after faith has vanished — in the system, in others, even in himself. With Robbie dying in his arms, Tom carries a guilt that no institutional victory will erase.

The most coherent ending for him would be a win on paper and a loss in spirit. He may arrest the remaining villains, expose corruption, even clear the rot from his own unit — but it will cost him peace, family, and perhaps his sense of self.

There’s also a path of resignation: Tom might walk away from the force entirely, too broken to keep playing the part of savior. Task has always treated heroism as a form of exhaustion, and Tom, drained and disillusioned, could simply choose to stop.

Maeve: Robbie’s legacy

Maeve never chose this war, but she survived it. With Robbie gone and her name cleared, she inherits what he left behind — safety, money, and the impossible task of protecting the children he died for.

She could flee, start over somewhere far from the violence, or stay and rebuild what’s left of their world. Either way, Maeve’s role becomes one of quiet endurance. She’ll never find peace, but she’ll have purpose — to give the next generation a life outside the shadow of crime.

Aleah: integrity under fire

Aleah began as the disciplined secondary agent, but as everyone else’s ethics fell apart, she became the last defender of what’s right. If Task remains consistent, she will be the voice of law in a landscape of betrayal.

She might get hurt, she might lose everything, but she’ll be the one who ensures the truth survives — exposing Grasso or helping Tom close the loop. She’s the kind of character whose survival is both painful and necessary: the moral compass in a world that’s lost its bearings.

Tom’s daughters and Sam: rebuilding the fragments

Tom’s family has always been the quiet core of Task. Now, with Sam on the verge of becoming a permanent part of the household, the finale will test this fragile new structure.

His daughters are still resisting the idea of sharing space — and affection — with a boy who embodies everything their father’s job destroyed. Yet, if Task has offered any hope, it lies here: in the small reconciliations, in the moments where love and pain coexist without resolution.

The show’s idea of redemption has never been clean. It’s about endurance — about choosing to rebuild even when the foundation has cracked.

An ending without heroes

Nothing about Task points to a happy ending. The series seems destined for a conclusion where justice and tragedy blur together, where every character pays the price of their choices in full.

Robbie’s fate is sealed. What remains is the reckoning for those still standing.


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