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What is the plot?
The episode opens with a flashback to an earlier time on Scribbly Gum Island, when a man comes to see Rose to ask for her hand in marriage, and Connie is already pregnant while trying to arrange a stable future for her sister. Rose has no interest in marrying him, Connie becomes angry at Rose's refusal, and Rose remains indifferent, still emotionally elsewhere.
After that, the story moves to young Enigma as a toddler, who asks Connie to tell her how she was found, keeping the old island mystery alive inside the family home. In the present, Sophie continues trying to understand the island's past and her place in it, while the family tensions around the baby mystery and the house keep building.
The next sequence follows Sophie attempting to show Rose the press release for the anniversary party. When Rose looks at it, she is overwhelmed by flashbacks of Alice, becomes visibly upset, shuts the laptop, and walks away without discussing it further.
The story then shifts to the family's financial and property disputes, where it is revealed that one of the men has been trying to transfer the house-related assets into his own name so he can take advantage of the family and leave Margie with nothing. This adds another layer of betrayal to the already unstable situation on the island.
Meanwhile, Sophie and Veronika continue digging into the old photographs and clues about Alice and Jack. They go down to the basement to search for the camera that took the pictures, and Sophie realizes that Rose is missing from the older photographs, which means Rose must have taken them herself.
While examining the evidence, Veronika finds a hidden photograph tucked behind a frame, but in the process the frame is accidentally broken. That discovery pushes the investigation forward and strengthens the suspicion that the official story about the baby mystery is incomplete.
Veronika then tells Rose that she has found someone named Audrey, using that revelation as a way to get Rose to open up. Veronika continues pressing Rose for the truth, and she deliberately brings up Alice and Jack in order to draw out what Rose has been hiding for years.
At the same time, the mystery around Jack is collapsing. The episode's ending reveals that Rose and Alice were not just close friends but lovers, and that there was never any Jack at all. This changes the meaning of everything the family believed about the old case and explains why Rose has been so emotionally fragile and resentful whenever the past is brought up.
As the episode closes, Veronika further confronts Rose by calling her Jack and showing her a photo that makes Rose appear to be wearing a man's shirt, tightening the pressure around Rose's hidden identity and the fabricated history. Rose is left on the verge of finally telling the family what really happened all those years ago, with the truth about Alice, the fake Jack story, and the old disappearance now fully exposed to the household.
What is the ending?
Rose finally tells Veronika the truth: Alice was her partner, there was never any Jack, and the old family story about a man and a disappearance was built around a lie. The ending also confirms that Rose was the one behind the old photographs and that the mystery on Scribbly Gum Island has been hiding in plain sight all along.
At the start of the ending sequence, Veronika keeps pressing Rose for answers, using the hidden clues from the old photographs and the basement camera to corner her into speaking. She finds the missing picture behind the frame, and that discovery pushes the conversation into the open. Veronika then tells Rose that she has uncovered a woman named Audrey, and she uses that as a way to get Rose to reveal what really happened between Alice and her.
Rose's confession is the emotional center of the ending. The episode makes clear that Rose was not simply grieving a friend; she was grieving Alice as the person she loved. That changes the meaning of everything that came before, including the old house, the preserved objects, and the repeated effort to keep the past untouched. The story ends with Rose at last ready to tell the family the truth about Alice and Jack, which means the family mystery is no longer being protected by silence.
Sophie's part in the ending is tied to the larger unraveling of the island mystery. As the clues about Alice and Jack come together, she realizes the story everyone has been told does not match the evidence, and the ending points her toward the truth that Rose is connected to the old photographs. Earlier in the episode, Sophie had been frustrated by her experiences with the island's men and was already leaning toward leaving, so the ending leaves her at a moment of uncertainty rather than resolution.
Margie and Enigma are also pulled into the final stretch of the mystery. Their discoveries in the family material help expose the hidden history of Scribbly Gum Island, and by the time the ending arrives, they are part of the group that has uncovered the lie at the center of the old disappearance story. Margie is also shown moving toward a life change of her own, with the recap noting that she is prepared to save the house and get out of her marriage.
The fate of the main characters at the end, based on the episode's closing developments, is this: Rose is finally on the verge of telling the full truth; Veronika has uncovered the crucial clues and is the one pushing the confession forward; Sophie is thinking seriously about leaving the island; Margie is moving toward protecting the house and leaving her husband; and the long-standing mystery of Alice and Jack is exposed as a false story built around Rose and Alice's real relationship.
Is there a post-credit scene?
There is no evidence in the available episode 5 recaps or listings of a separate post-credit scene in The Last Anniversary, episode 5.
What the sources do describe is an ending reveal sequence: Sophie and Veronika investigate the basement, find the camera tied to the old photographs, discover that Rose is missing from the older pictures, and uncover a hidden photo behind a broken frame. The episode then ends on the major secret that Rose and Alice were a couple and that Jack never existed, with Veronika finally pressing Rose to explain what really happened.
If you want, I can also summarize the full ending of episode 5 scene by scene.
What exactly happened to the Munro baby, and who discovered the abandoned baby on Scribbly Gum Island?
The question focuses on the Baby Munro Mystery, including the baby's discovery and the circumstances around the Munro couple's disappearance.
Why did Connie leave the house to Sophie, and what was Sophie supposed to do on the island?
This question targets Connie's motive for bringing Sophie into the family's world and whether Sophie was meant to help unravel the island mystery.
Who are Enigma’s biological parents, and what is the connection between Enigma, Rose, and Connie?
This asks about the specific family relationships at the center of the story, especially how Enigma was discovered and raised by Rose and Connie.
What is Veronika investigating, and how does her search connect to the Baby Munro Mystery?
This question is about Veronika's personal investigation and how it intersects with the larger mystery on the island.
What happened to Alice and Jack Munro before they vanished, and what clues were left behind in their home?
This focuses on the specific events surrounding the Munros' disappearance, including the traces left in the house such as the cake, record player, and blood.
Is this family friendly?
Probably not fully family-friendly for young children; it is more suitable for older teens and adults because IMDb's parental guide rates the series as having moderate frightening/intense scenes, with mild violence, mild profanity, mild alcohol/drug/smoking, and no sex/nudity listed. The series is also described by Roku as a TV-MA comedy-drama mystery, which is another signal that it is not aimed at small children.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements that may matter for children or sensitive viewers include:
- Mysterious and tense scenes involving secrets, old disappearances, and emotional confrontations.
- Some mild violence and brief scary/intense moments.
- Mild profanity.
- Mild alcohol, drugs, or smoking content.
- Adult relationship and identity themes that are handled as part of the mystery, which may be confusing or sensitive for younger viewers.
- Flashbacks and emotional conflict around family history and long-buried secrets, which may feel upsetting even without graphic content.
For episode 5 specifically, available recap material suggests no explicit sex/nudity, but it does include flashbacks, emotional arguments, and tense secret-reveals, so it may still be too intense for very young children.