Warning! Spoilers ahead for Season 2, Episode 4 of Unseen.
If Episode 3 cracked a door open, Episode 4 throws a match inside. This episode doesn’t explode. It burns—slow, calculated, dangerous. And Zenzi? She’s no longer avoiding the flames. She’s learning how to feed them.
We open with a familiar tension: Zenzi in motion, but not running. She’s watching. Listening. Preparing. Following the thread her sister left behind in the previous episode, she begins retracing a name—one that shouldn’t still be alive. One tied to the death of her husband, and the machinery behind the cleaning company that served as both prison and disguise.
Episode 4 is structured like a memory—fragmented, shadowed, but devastatingly intentional.
In a bold move by the writers, we get flashbacks not from Zenzi, but from someone else: Detective Mokoena. For the first time, we see the investigation from his side. What we assumed was incompetence is revealed as something far worse: complicity. Corruption. A network of men protecting each other at the expense of women like Zenzi.
But here’s where it gets sharper—Zenzi now knows that too. She’s ahead of him. She’s been watching the watchers.
The pacing here is brilliant. While Zenzi sets traps in silence, the show lets us stew in the dread of anticipation. You can feel something coming, but you don’t know from where. Or whom. Every time she crosses the street, looks out a window, or moves through a crowded market, it’s like you’re holding your breath. Is this the moment they catch her? Or the moment she turns it all around?
The emotional spine of the episode belongs to a different character altogether: Naledi, the young girl Zenzi helped escape from a violent employer in Season 1. We haven’t seen her since, but now, she reappears—older, stronger, and with a message: “You didn’t just save me. You taught me how to run. And how to stay.”
It’s not just a touching reunion. It’s strategic.
Zenzi, it turns out, isn’t just escaping anymore. She’s building something. A network. A quiet army of women who’ve been erased, overlooked, underestimated. For the first time, we see that Zenzi’s fight might be bigger than her own grief. It’s personal, yes—but it’s also becoming political.
By the time the credits roll, we’ve watched Zenzi do what she does best: vanish into a crowd, but leave a trail of smoke behind. The final scene shows Detective Mokoena walking into an apartment expecting silence—only to find a wall covered in photos, notes, and string. At the center: his own face.
It’s official. Zenzi is no longer being hunted. She’s hunting.
And “Smoke” is the first breath of something much bigger—something boiling under the surface, preparing to burn down everything that made her invisible in the first place.