I'm Not Convinced 'Fire Country's Oxalta Storyline Is Wrapped Up After That Season 3 Cliffhanger

   

In the second half of Season 3, Fire Country embarked on one of its most interesting plotlines yet, all revolving around the company Oxalta. It turns out that Oxalta International Holdings is the biggest chemical company in California, and they’ve been illegally dumping their waste into the water that runs through Three Rock. This is why Nathan Birch (Jeff Gladstone) got sick so suddenly, resulting in his death, and Manny’s (Kevin Alejandro) life was likewise threatened. If not for a settlement between our heroes and the corporation, there would likely have been even more heartbreak on the show — and after what happened in that two-part finale, we can't handle any more tragedy. Still, I'm not convinced that this Oxalta plotline is done, and if it is, I'm not sure if that's for the best, either.

'Fire Country's Oxalta Plot Seems To Have Ended a Bit Too Easily

Manny Perez (Kevin Alejandro) lies sick in bed surrounded by friends and family on 'Fire Country'
Image via CBS

Only five episodes after Birch's death, and Season 3, Episode 18's "Eyes and Ears Everywhere" seems to "defeat" Oxalta after Meriweather's (J. August Richards) blackmail scheme is exposed. Having tried to coerce the Three Rock inmates and their families into leaving the corporation alone, the whole controversy involving misplaced chemical waste is now in "the court of public opinion." Even though I'm glad that our heroes got out of this whole thing relatively unscathed, I also agree with Bode (Max Thieriot) that Oxalta can't just get away with this. The way the whole thing ended feels a bit too convenient. Of course, this isn't the first time that Fire Country has kickstarted a major plotline only to drop it after a few episodes (more on that in a minute), but it seems that a company like Oxalta would warrant a larger story, especially if they're the biggest chemical waste producers in the entire state.

For a plotline that was quite a bit more interesting than many of Fire Country's antics this season (though, the second half was certainly better than the first), it feels like there wasn't really any payoff. The lack of discussion about Oxalta in the two-part finale — despite everything that was going on — leads me to wonder if that story is meant to be done. If this is supposed to be it, we're just supposed to accept that nothing more can or will be done about it. But my hope is that the company will play a part in the upcoming fourth season, or perhaps even in the long-anticipated Sheriff Country spin-off. Otherwise, it seems like a lot of set-ups for a story that sort of just fizzled out. Yes, there was a "conclusion" of sorts, but it wasn't exactly satisfying to either us or the characters.

'Fire Country' Has a Bad Habit of Dropping Plotlines

Morena Baccarin, Max Thieriot, and W. Earl Brown in Fire Country Season 3 Episode 16.
Image via CBS

Ever since the first season, Fire Country has had a bad habit of starting story ideas only not to pay them off well or finish them. Sometimes, when the show is called out on it, there is a course-correction made, but even then things may fall flat. Take Fiona Rene's Rebecca Lee from Season 1. There was something special between Rebecca and Bode in that first season, and for several episodes, the show wrote her out entirely. Eventually, she was killed off altogether. Even worse, we haven't had a proper female inmate plotline ever since. With Three Rock now burned to the ground and Audrey James (Leven Rambin) potentially in some legal trouble, that could finally happen in Season 4, but it's been some years in between. And this isn't to mention all that talk in Season 2 about Jake (Jordan Calloway) being a father to Gen (Alix West Lefler), only for the show to write her out entirely as well.

What I don't want is for Oxalta — even if our heroes can't fully take the corporation down — to go the way of Freddy Mills (W. Tre Davis) after the first two seasons. It's easy for network shows like Fire Country to introduce characters or plotlines and then avoid paying them off. After all, in a procedural, the next case (in this case, the next fire) always takes precedence over everything else. Still, it seems highly likely that — if Fire Country were anything like reality — Oxalta wouldn't just go away or even leave Edgewater entirely. In my mind, they may have gone dormant for a time, but they could easily come back and cause more trouble for Bode, Manny, and their families again. More than that, they should, especially if they're as big a threat as Fire Country wants us to believe they are.

How Could Oxalta Come Back in 'Fire Country' Season 4?

With the destruction of Three Rock in Season 3's finale, "I'd Do It Again," Fire Country is no longer the show it once was. Whether that is a good thing long-term or bad is yet unclear, and we won't really know for sure until Season 4. Still, I'm hopeful that this doesn't mean the end of the show's commitment to the inmate firefighting program, as that is a major part of what makes the show tick. But if Oxalta really wanted to get the public's favor, I think that Fire Country ought to involve the corporation in the resurrection of Three Rock. Perhaps they donate a substantial amount of money to see the fire camp rebuilt and restaffed, only for their hold on our heroes to grow stronger. That would certainly make Oxalta a real force to be reckoned with.

While the possibilities are endless, my only hope is that when Fire Country starts new plotlines, it learns to see them through. We've come a long way with these characters, and we want to see them thrive. Even if things don't always go the way we want them (but seriously, don't kill Billy Burke, please), sudden changes in the narrative need to still feel natural. Character exits should be earned, and the same is true of major plotlines. From what I can tell, Oxalta may just be getting started in Edgewater. Considering how engaging that whole plot was, I hope I'm not wrong.