Helen meets with a May/December couple to change their wills and Petro drops by to give Helen some news. A scandal erupts around Gruber and Associates.
Gruber and Gruber is nominated for a Small Business Award and Helen consults with a man who believes he is the son of a famous newsreader. At Dad's house, Helen meets personal trainer, Blayden Tork.
George is overworked and Roz is having trouble finding a suitable assistant. Helen needs to ascertain the correct beneficiary of a large charity bequest and has to take the matter to court.
Helen meets with two estranged brothers to broker a compromise over their mother's will, while Ray and George try to get rid of a rogue pigeon. Dad and Viktor worry that Helen doesn't have a social life.
Helen deals with a nuisance claim and Roz makes Helen attend a staff training session with Lindy Baxter Smythe. Ray is shredding for a reunion and the office acquires a new photocopier.
Helen steps up to do Ray's regular probate information talk at the local library and Roz is pursued by a gentleman caller. Helen searches for a priceless family heirloom that has gone missing in an estate clean up.
Helen meets formidable opposing counsel Alice Pike, and stumbles upon Roz's passion project; an all-woman harmony group for funerals called The Sadrigals. Alice Pike makes a complaint to the board about Roz.
Helen meets with a woman who is demanding power of attorney over her mother and attends her ex-husband William's writer's festival run by literary interlocutor, Lindy Baxter-Smythe.
When Helen Tudor-Fisk's life falls apart, she takes a job in a small suburban firm specializing in wills and probate, assuming that because the clients are dead she won't have to deal with people.
Roz announces a new business venture and Ray entrusts Helen with the firm's most prestigious client. Helen meets with an influencer who wants to make a video will and George receives a gift.