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What is the plot?
Angel helps Faith after she arrives in Los Angeles wounded, unstable, and hunted, and he takes her into his apartment instead of turning her in or abandoning her. Faith is emotionally frayed from the violence in her past, and when she hears that there is a warrant out for her arrest, she panics and tries to hold herself together while Angel keeps calm and protective around her.
Faith stays in Angel's apartment and begins reliving memories of the killings and chaos she caused in Sunnydale. Angel continues to reach out to her, treating her as someone who can still be saved rather than as a fugitive who deserves punishment. Faith briefly becomes overwhelmed by a violent flash of imagination in which she attacks Angel, and the image of his face being cut leaves her shaken and frightened by what she might do.
As Faith struggles with her guilt, Angel keeps offering her safety and another chance, but her shame keeps surfacing in flashes. Downstairs, she confesses to Angel that she is haunted by what she has done, and in the course of that conversation she also lets slip that Buffy is dating someone else, revealing that she is still absorbing new information while trapped inside her own spiraling remorse.
Meanwhile, Wesley is in a bar playing darts when he is approached by Weatherby of the Watchers Council Special Operations Team, who is actively hunting Faith. The Council offers Wesley a chance to return to them if he will help capture her. They give him a syringe that will sedate Faith so they can take her back to England, and Wesley agrees on the condition that Angel is not harmed, a condition Weatherby reluctantly accepts.
At the same time, Lindsey McDonald, Lilah Morgan, and Lee Mercer are furious that Faith has aligned herself with Angel, so they hire a demon to kill her. In Angel's apartment, while Angel is trying to comfort Faith, the hired demon suddenly sneaks in and attacks. Faith kills it with a knife, but the sight of the demon's blood on her own hands horrifies her and reinforces how deeply trapped she is in violence.
Buffy then arrives unexpectedly at Angel's place and is shocked to see Angel holding Faith. Her arrival turns the already unstable situation into an emotional confrontation, because Angel is now visibly protecting Faith while Buffy has walked into the aftermath of that choice. The tension between Angel, Buffy, and Faith becomes immediate and raw.
Detective Kate Lockley, using information supplied by Lindsey, moves in and arrests Angel for harboring Faith. Angel, Kate, Wesley, and Buffy end up at the police station, where they are surprised to discover that Faith has gone there voluntarily and is confessing to her crimes instead of resisting arrest. Her decision to turn herself in becomes the key turning point of the episode, because it shows that she has chosen punishment and accountability over escape.
What is the ending?
In the ending, Halil is still carrying the weight of the funeral and pushes himself into work, trying to keep his promise to Ali Fuat. The final moments leave the family and the club in a tense place, with grief, duty, and unresolved conflict still hanging over everyone.
Scene by scene, the ending opens after the funeral, with Halil refusing to stop and grieve in place. He throws himself into work day and night, focusing on the club and on keeping his promise to Ali Fuat rather than resting in his pain.
Around him, the aftermath of the loss remains present. The episode does not close with a sudden resolution or a clean reconciliation; instead, it stays with the characters in the middle of their struggle, still living through the consequences of what has happened.
As for the main characters at the end of the story, Halil is left exhausted but determined, choosing action over stillness. The other central characters remain bound to the emotional damage and unfinished matters surrounding the funeral, with no final escape from the conflict before the episode ends.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I can't confirm a post-credit scene for "Secrets of an Angel" Season 1, Episode 19 from the provided results.
The only directly relevant result is an IMDb "Crazy credits" page for that exact episode, which indicates that the episode has some kind of special credits or hidden-credit material, but the search snippet does not say what it is. The other results are about unrelated shows or reference "credits scenes" in general, so they do not verify a post-credit scene for this episode.
If you want, I can help you determine whether the IMDb entry is likely referring to a true post-credit scene, an end-credit gag, or hidden text in the credits.
Is this family friendly?
Yes, this family is friendly. The show is described as wholesome, rewatchable, and filled with family-friendly entertainment suitable for children and sensitive viewers. Potentially objectionable or upsetting aspects that might occur for children or sensitive people include themes of an orphan escaping an institution, a dark secret being hidden by a parent, struggles with demons or past trauma, and emotional discussions about faith and redemption. These elements are presented in a gentle, educational, and heartwarming manner without graphic violence, explicit content, or plot-spilling details.