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It’s a neat trick to keep the police from poking their noses in the case. Paying out the claim would essentially be the final nail in their business’ coffin. Having inherited a crumbling agency from their dead father, the brothers have personal reasons to prove that foul play was involved in John Paul’s death. Matters are further complicated by the arrival of two sibling insurance agents, who have their own reasons to suspect the Garvey sisters. Whatever she does is of her own volition. Nobody manipulates her, nobody threatens her. Later, the three oldest sisters make sure to keep the youngest - Becka - as far away from the mess as they can. “It’s barbaric, and we’re not murderers,” one of them tells the other in an early episode, indicating that this is not a decision that they’ve taken lightly. None of them enjoys the revenge in fact, they’re greatly pained by it - like true Irish Catholics, they’re struck by guilt before they can be struck by our judgement. But at no point does the show let any of the Garvey sisters become irredeemable. Having watched John Paul (played so devilishly well by Claes Bang that you’ll want him dead even before he has committed the gravest of his crimes) emotionally abuse Grace for years, her sisters contemplate killing him with increasing seriousness.