Veronica Mars

"Normal. That's the watchword."

After discovering the answers to questions that plagued her life for the better part of two years, Veronica is determined to put the turmoil behind her and have a "normal" life. She trades in her after-school P.I. job in favor of a part-time hostessing job. She ditches 09er-vs-non-09er-lightning-rod Logan and begins dating helps-clear-off-the-tables Duncan. She hides the truth from her loving (but gun-toting) dad about her late-night "dim sum and then some" sessions with her boyfriend. She throughly embraces her friendship with Wallace, even up to the point of retracting her claws and keeping her snark in check regarding a certain hot, bitchy transfer student from New York.

How long is this normalcy going to last? Is she really going to give up the detective biz? If she isn't the ostracized, angry loner of yesteryear, then who is she?

If you have to ask, then you haven't been watching the show too closely, have you?

Her hair might have gotten a little longer, her necklaces might have changed, and her social status might have climbed up a few notches, but at the core she is still Veronica Mars. She might be a little less angry, and a little bit happier, but nevertheless, she is still as fierce, strong, vulnerable, brilliant, sarcastic, and mercilessly, scandalously hot as ever.

During her junior year, Meg and Weevil were two of the few people she could count on. When they begin pushing her away, instead of just shutting down and letting go, she tries to rebuild their friendships. Weevil accepts Veronica's offer of friendship; Meg does not.

By some weird twist of fate, the cruelest—and ultimately the kindest—thing Meg ever did for Veronica was to leave Veronica behind at the gas station. That bus accident left Meg in a coma and ended the lives of seven people. In a town filled with secrets, lies, and corruption, that bus accident was not just an "accident."

Filled with mixed emotions about not being on that doomed bus ride, Veronica disproves Lamb's theory that the accident was a suicide attempt by the bus driver, Ed Doyle. While she usually delights in proving Sheriff Lamb wrong, her gloating is short-lived. She discovers that former stuntman David "Curly" Moran worked with Aaron on a movie that had a truck-driving-off-a-bridge stunt. Did the recently murdered "Curly" set up the bus-driving-off-a-cliff "accident" just to prevent her from testifying at Aaron's trial? Did all those people die because of her? How much do Weevil and Logan really know about the bus crash and Curly's death? Why does Duncan sit outside Meg's hospital room every day?

How far is Veronica willing to go to find the answers when the answers hit so close to home? How much investigating can this recently rehired research/file/phone-only receptionist do before her dad fires her again? And most importantly, which *cough, cough* digit will Keith shoot when finds out about the "then some" dinners?

-wyk
Bio as of 2.04 "Green-Eyed Monster"
All bios: 3.20 3.18 3.16 3.14 3.12 3.10 3.09 3.07 3.02 3.01 2.22 2.17 2.14 2.11 2.10 2.09 2.05 2.04 2.03 2.02 2.01 1.22 1.20 1.01

Kristen Bell plays Veronica Mars.


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