What is the plot?

Morning in Spain breaks over the villa with harsh sunlight and the sound of a rooster, and Episode 3 opens on the immediate aftermath of Ronnie Phelan's murder: Ronnie's body lies dead on a lounger, and the phone of another dead man is found in the swimming pool nearby.

Back in the villa, Michael Kavanagh wakes with his partner Diana beside him, and it is clear she already knows what he has done because she caught him choosing his murder weapon in the kitchen the night before. Diana first pretends to still be asleep, then tells Michael she wants to go back to Liverpool immediately. Michael tries to reassure her and wants her to stay with him, insisting that what he did was necessary because Ronnie had started to distrust him and planned to hand control to his son Jamie instead.

The day initially continues with the appearance of an ordinary holiday morning, even though the murder hangs over everything. Jamie goes downstairs to make a bottle for his baby son, and his girlfriend Rachel is with him. Rachel complains that she is a qualified accountant but Ronnie never wanted her to work for him, underscoring the way Ronnie kept people close but did not fully trust or empower them.

Ronnie's wife Elaine then joins Jamie and Rachel, acting as if it is simply another family morning. She laughs about Ronnie being asleep on a lounger and fills a coffeepot with cold water, planning to wake him. The episode keeps the tension tightly focused on who knows what, with the family moving around the villa around the dead man while the consequences of the killing begin to settle in.

What is the ending?

In the ending of Episode 3, Ronnie is already dead, and the family is forced to sit inside the aftermath of his murder. Michael and Diana are in Spain with the others, trying to behave normally while the body remains hidden in plain sight. Jamie is still unaware of the full truth, and the episode ends with the danger of the secret still hanging over everyone.

Scene by scene, the ending unfolds in a tense, uneasy silence.

The episode opens with the shock of the murder already in place. Ronnie lies dead on a sun lounger in Spain, and his phone is in the pool nearby. Michael is the killer, and Diana knows what he has done because she saw him choosing the murder weapon the night before. When Michael wakes, he tries to steady Diana and keep her close, but she wants to go home to Liverpool. He tells her that what he did was necessary, because Ronnie had lost trust in him and was preparing to hand the criminal empire to Jamie instead.

In the final stretch of the episode, the others are still moving around the villa and treating the day like a normal holiday morning, even though everything has changed. Jamie goes downstairs to make a bottle for his baby son, and Rachel is with him. Rachel complains that Ronnie never wanted to use her accounting skills. Elaine also appears and acts as if Ronnie is only asleep, even though she has seen enough to understand that something is wrong.

The episode's ending leaves everyone in a dangerous position.

Michael's fate at the end of the episode is that he has crossed the point of no return by killing Ronnie, and he is now trying to hold Diana together while pretending the situation can still be controlled. Diana's fate is that she is trapped in the knowledge of the murder and unsettled by it; she wants to leave Spain and go home. Ronnie's fate is death, with his body left out on the lounger as the family continues around him. Jamie's fate is uncertainty: he is still alive, still present, and still being kept out of the truth, but the death of his father leaves his future in the criminal empire in immediate doubt. Rachel's fate is to remain inside the family tension, tied to Jamie and the collapse of the old order. Elaine's fate is to sit closest to the truth, watching the death unfold and quietly absorbing what it means.

If you want, I can also give you the full Episode 3 ending in even more detail, with every major scene from the final third of the episode.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no indication in the available episode 3 recaps that This City Is Ours episode 3 has a post-credit scene. The coverage of the episode's ending focuses on the main story developments--especially the aftermath of Ronnie's death, the ferry journey, and the characters' next moves--but does not mention any extra scene after the credits.

What the recaps do describe is the episode's core ending material: Michael returns to the villa, the group discusses how to get Ronnie home, and Elaine says she wants to come along on the two-day journey. Another recap frames the episode as centering on survival and succession after a dead body is found at the start, again with no mention of a post-credit tag.

So, based on the available sources, the safest answer is: no known post-credit scene is reported for episode 3.

What are the 5 most popular questions people ask about This City Is Ours, Season 1, Episode 3, specifically about the story content?

The five most popular questions about the story content of This City Is Ours, Season 1, Episode 3, excluding overall plot and ending, are: 1) What happens during the ferry ride with Ronnie's body and how does tension develop among the group? 2) How does Michael take control after Ronnie's death and what decisions does he make? 3) Who are the main suspects or threats considered responsible for Ronnie's death? 4) How do the characters plan to smuggle Ronnie's body back to Liverpool and what challenges do they face? 5) What role do other characters like Jamie, Elaine, and Banksey play in the events following Ronnie's death? These questions focus on the episode's key events involving the aftermath of Ronnie's death, the group's dynamics, and their plans to handle the situation without involving the police.

Is this family friendly?

No, this is not family friendly for children, and it is likely upsetting for sensitive viewers.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements include: - Violence and a deadly power struggle in the criminal underworld. - Drug trade and organized crime themes, including references to a cocaine trade and a drug empire. - Sexual content, as the series is labeled with "sex" in its content warning. - Death-related material in episode 3, which is described only as dealing with the aftermath of a "shocking death."

If you want, I can also give a very short "age suitability" recommendation by age group.

Does the dog die?

No. In Episode 3 of This City Is Ours, the plot centers on the aftermath of Ronnie's death and the gang's effort to smuggle his body back to Liverpool; the available episode recaps do not indicate any dog death in this episode.

If you want, I can also give you a detailed spoiler recap of Episode 3.