Please say it’s not so.   We’re powerless though. One way or the other, Mark’s fate is already sealed. If causing the audience maximum upset is Broadchurch’s game then he’ll sink under those waves. If it’s still the same story of human resilience it was in series one, he’ll survive. I’m pinning all my hopes on the latter and ignoring the fact that Broadchurch pulled a Neighbours with that special sad music playing over the credits in place of the usual theme song.

It was anger, not grief, that fuelled the rest of episode six. Hardy and Miller were on incandescent underling-bollocking, laptop-smashing form, Ed Burnett rose to every bit of Hardy’s bait, Miller raged at her dad’s ignorant opinions, Neera raged against Beth, Beth raged against the attacker, Cath raged against Jim, and Trish put Cath in her place in another terrifically acted scene between Julie Hesmondhalgh and Sarah Parish.  In terms of the investigation, Trish’s attacker has been narrowed down from sixty-five to twenty-something potential suspects, but the key names remain Ed, Ian, Lucas, Leo and Jim. Let’s run through the latest with them. Clive barely featured, aside from looming menacingly out behind Lyndsey while Miller’s public statement was broadcast, but Miller learning that he’s the one indirectly supplying Tom’s porn means he’s sure to come back under the spotlight next week. Ditto for Ian, the dodgy contents of whose laptop we’re about to see uncovered. He’s obviously a conniving liar, but is he a serial rapist?  “Twine boy” Leo was suitably spooked by the police sniffing around, but at this point, I’m moved to take my casino chips off his square and push them over to Jim’s. A few things shore up that hunch: 1) the new information about the unreported victim having phoned a vehicle breakdown service before she was attacked, 2) the speed at which Jim asked Cath to leave town with him, 3) his unfeelingly arrogant suggestion that they ‘style out’ his adultery with Trish, 4) the fact that Cath suspected he might be guilty, and 5) Jim being revealed as Trish’s rapist would make a sage point about the separation between rape and sex. With two episodes to go though, all that can and will change. We’re almost no closer to narrowing in on the rapist than we were after episode one. Each of the above had opportunity, each of them lied about their whereabouts on the night of the attack… it’s no wonder Hardy and Miller were feeling frustrated, not least after Harford’s “stupid, basic, page one mistake”. Nobody knows better than them how it feels for a guilty party to walk free because a clever defence tore holes in an investigation jeopardised by misconduct. Overall though, it was hard to concentrate fully on the case with Mark’s powerful thread woven through the episode. Cleverly, the scenes in Liverpool deliberately wrong-footed us by framing Mark as predator and Joe as prey. By continually drawing our attention to Mark’s knife, Joe was made to look like the endangered party, making that final scene even more harrowing to watch for its unexpectedness.  Please let Mark live. The people of Broadchurch don’t give up – just look at Ellie. Or listen to Hardy’s touching plea to Daisy to stay and “fight a wee bit”, another of this episode’s many beautifully acted speeches. I know, I know. I’m in denial. It’s the first stage of grief. Read Louisa’s review of the previous episode here.