Jack and Mel face heartbreak (again!) and rely on the kindness of their friends and
neighbors (again!) as the small-town romance returns to Netflix.
The Netflix show thatâs equal parts heart-racing nature shots and big-hearted small-town drama is back,
and in season 5, which dropped on Sept. 7, a massive wildfire threatens the town of Virgin River.
By the time the smoke clears, hearts will be broken, relationships forged and destroyed, and mud baths ruined. Letâs recap!
Episode 1: âA Second Chanceâ
Hereâs hoping you remember last seasonâs cliffhangers, because Virgin River drops us right into the thick of them.
Jackâs (Martin Henderson) still reeling from the news that Charmaine (Lauren Hammersley), aka the worst person on earth, lied about him fathering her twins.
When Brie (Zibby Allen) hears the news, she declares, âI never liked her.â Same, sis. And despite his assurances to Mel (Alexandra Breckinridge), Jackâs not handling the news well.
Melâs dealing with her own stress and decides to step away from her job at the clinic because of her high-risk pregnancy. Cameron (Mark GhanimĂ©) offers to leave â remember, he awkwardly hit on her last season â but she insists that sheâs the one to go.
This leaves Doc (Tim Matheson) alone with his failing eyesight and his concerns about how well Cameron fits into the practice.
At least his grandson Dennyâs (Kai Bradbury) fitting better into Docâs home life after opening up about his terminal Huntingtonâs Disease diagnosis. Denny also apologizes to Lizzie (Sarah Dugdale) for being secretive about it for so long, and the two get back together.
Lizzieâs working as Hopeâs (Annette OâToole) post-TBI home health aid and takes all of Hopeâs prickly Hope-ness in stride, even when Hope learns that her alleged friend Muriel (Teryl Rothery) is helping prepare a no-confidence vote against her mayorship. Itâs the closest betrayals you never see coming.
Speaking of keeping the people you love in the dark, Brieâs still seeing Brady (Benjamin Hollingsworth), and Bradyâs still working for Melissa Montgomery (Barbara Pollard), whoâs forcing him to help run fentanyl through the lumber yard after Calvin, her former CFO of drug smuggling, died in a boat explosion.
Melissa keeps Brady under her thumb by reminding him that bad things will happen to Brie if he doesnât obey, and she uses Jackâs friendship with her brother Nick (Keith MacKechnie) to invest in his new glamping business to launder all that money.
But the fentanyl makes it onto the town radar when tow-truck driver Bert (Trevor Lerner) stops to help one of Melissaâs henchmen (Darcy Laurie) fix a flat and cuts himself trying to reach the spare tire where the fentanylâs hidden.
Before long, Bertâs at the clinic with wooziness and pinpoint pupils, and Doc suggests accidental fentanyl exposure.
Public health and safety message! While fentanyl can affect a person if it gets into an open wound like Bertâs, it canât be absorbed through the skin, and inhaling it on accident generally wonât cause an overdose. Accidental fentanyl exposureâs just not as common as police reports and the news make it sound.
Cameron, meanwhile, is right that you canât ever really know if another person uses drugs. But heâs wrong to get snippy when Doc asks him to make coffee now that Melâs gone.
Next, we left Preacher (Colin Lawrence) last season fighting off Vince (Steve Bacic), whoâs big mad that Paige (Lexa Doig) killed his brother in self-defense.
Thankfully, Mike (Marco Grazzini) shows up to arrest Vince for getting all violent and kidnappy and for being the mystery man who shot Jack last season. Better luck not having an abuser for a brother next time, Vince!
Assuming he and Paige are headed for a happy ever after, Preacher ends things with the very nice Julia (Lawrenceâs real-life wife, Lucia Walters). But Paige and her son want to leave the town and all its bad memories, so Preacher sadly bids them farewell. I bet heâs wishing he hadnât ended things with Julia quiiiiite so quickly now.
Wanting to learn how to hand-make baby clothes like her mom did, Mel joins the town sewing circle, where sheâs introduced to the late Lillyâs daughter Ava (Libby Osler), whoâs reluctantly back in town and coping by wearing an aggressively wide-brimmed fedora.
By the end of the episode, Mel â who escaped to Virgin River â is having dinner with Ava â who escaped from Virgin River â when Ava dramatically collapses. Was it toxic hat exposure?
Brie also has a scary night when someone tosses a rock through the front door of her new apartment. She assumes itâs because sheâs going to testify in her ex-boyfriendâs rape trial, but Brady has a different list of suspects.
Jack, meanwhile, has been stewing about Charmaineâs duplicity for the whole episode and angrily shows up at her house to talk. If that woman turns up dead, weâll all be forced to testify against him. I mean, did you see the murderous look on his face?
Episode 2: âSongbirdâ
To no oneâs surprise, Charmaine survives her talk with Jack, although he refuses to accept her apology for humiliating him and breaking his heart. (Funny, thatâs how she felt as she watched him fall in love with Mel.)
She says the real father was a one-time thing and Jack was her best option to give the twins a good life. Maâam. Setting all emotional and ethical considerations aside, it costs approximately $400,000 to raise a child to the age of 18 in California, and weâre talking about two of them here. And youâre all la la la forgive me??
Jack cools off by hiking to Angelâs Peak with Brie, who finally tells him that sheâs a rape survivor. He offers to be in court when she testifies, but she doesnât want that big brother protectiveness. Besides, Bradyâs coming with her.
Jack doesnât love it but agrees to give Brady another chance at dinner that night. When he blames Charmaine for keeping him too busy to realize what was happening with Brie, Mel gently suggests that he might actually owe Charmaine an apology for leading her on for years.
After a pep talk from Doc, Charmaine swings by the cabin to apologize to Mel, and Jack asks for forgiveness too. Charmaine vows to build the life she always wanted and leaves with more optimism than weâve ever seen from her.
I entreat you, oh god of vexing side characters, please let this be the last we see of Charmaine. (The god of vexing side characters is, of course, Ellis.)
Melâs new friend Ava collapsed from endometriosis, which has been painful for so long that her doctor recommends a hysterectomy. But Ava abruptly ends the conversation when Mel pushes her to make a treatment plan.
Listen, I hate that Hope has a TBI, but itâs almost refreshing to have a woman in Virgin River dealing with a medical issue that isnât unique to people with uteruses. The CDC might want to investigate why the areaâs per capita incidence of pregnancy/fertility/reproductive system issues is the highest in the known universe.
Mel eventually apologizes for overstepping, and she and Ava share emotional stories about losing their mothers to cancer and how hard it is to face the thought of motherhood without them. In fact, her momâs been on Melâs mind a lot and gives the episode its name; Songbird, about loving someone after theyâre gone, was her motherâs favorite song.
Mel tells Jack that her mother miscarried a child named Chloe, which is why she gave Lillyâs daughter that name in season 1. Further, her motherâs death sparked Melâs desire to work in the medical field, and sheâs worried that stepping away from the clinic will weaken that connection.
No surprise, the clinicâs struggling a bit in Melâs absence. Cameron doesnât know how to file insurance claims online, and Doc barks at him to figure it out. (Fellow educators, did you groan and nod vigorously at that familiar advice?)
Muriel finds Cameron moping and urges him to show Doc a little backbone. Um, how âbout you show Doc a little initiative and step it up around the office now that youâre down a person?
Although I didnât think Docâs been particularly patronizing, Cameron asks to be treated like the grown-up professional man that he is, and Doc agrees. Hopefully this gets them on a better path. It helps that Muriel comes on board part-time to take care of the filing, make the coffee â and engage in surprisingly playful banter with Cameron.
Now that Paige is gone, Preacherâs putting all his focus on making elevated comfort food using his momâs recipes the way he used to in Iraq. (I would pay so much money to DoorDash for a serving of his blue-crab mac and cheese right now.) While he cooks, the radio mentions a wildfire thatâs spreading nearby, but Iâm sure thereâs no reason to be concerned about that. *nervous laugh*
Hopeâs solely focused on stopping the âludicrous power grabâ no-confidence vote and plans to deliver a speech affirming her governing abilities. She tells Lizzie and Denny that sheâs the townâs first and only mayor, and itâs the one part of her identity that her TBI didnât touch.
The teenagers agree that this should be her speech, and she delivers it with passion at the opening of Lillyâs memorial garden, talking about what makes the town special and how much she still has to give.
Alas, itâs not enough; sheâs voted out by everyone but Muriel.
At the lumber yard, Melissa forces Brady to add his friend Jeb (Sandy Robson) to the secret fentanyl crew. Brady tries to warn him off, but Jeb wants the extra money for his family.
When Brie texts to ask about having dinner with Jack that night, Jeb offers to cover the lumber/drug shift. Brady gladly accepts.