The Bay S02e02 Satrip [updated] May 2026
Sasha is in a specialist facility, not a prison. Clara visits daily. Paul, cleared of any wrongdoing, is learning to forgive a woman who never existed. Lucy draws again—a three-legged bird with a fourth leg growing back.
Jenn digs. She finds a small private psychiatric facility, closed in 2019, called — “Satrip” as an acronym. And there, buried in archived patient files, is a second daughter: Nina Farrow (born 1979) , admitted age 16, diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder. The records show that Nina did die—but her alternate identity, a protective alter named “Sasha” , may have been the one who walked out of the tide that day, while Nina’s core consciousness drowned. the bay s02e02 satrip
Clara, cornered, admits the truth: “Sasha is the sister I couldn’t save. She took Lucy because she thinks Paul is the same man who hurt us as children. But Paul isn’t. He’s good. I lied about Nina dying so Sasha could disappear. But she never did.” The climax takes place at low tide, beneath the rusting skeleton of an old pier—a place called “The Strip” by locals, a narrow spit of land only accessible when the bay retreats. Sasha (believing herself to be Nina) has brought Lucy here to perform a “cleansing.” Lucy is not tied up. She is drawing in the sand with a stick, calm. “Auntie Sasha says we’re going on a trip,” Lucy tells Jenn. “To where the water was before.” Sasha is in a specialist facility, not a prison
Jenn visits Nina’s last known address: a crumbling caravan park on the edge of the bay, closed for the season. Inside: walls covered in drawings. A recurring symbol—a three-legged bird, a sailboat with no hull, and the word written in charcoal, over and over. Lucy draws again—a three-legged bird with a fourth
Sasha explains: “Satrip. St. Adrian’s. They used to take us to the shore. They said the salt would strip the bad selves away. But it doesn’t strip. It just… buries.”