The High Potential season 2 finale leaves Morgan and Karadec exactly where the show has liked to keep them: close enough to raise the question, not close enough to answer it. Kaitlin Olson says that push and pull is the point, and that the series is still "always towing that line" between whether the two will finally get together.
Season 2 widened that dynamic instead of resolving it. Karadec had a relationship with his ex, Lucia, while Morgan flirted with Captain Wagner, and Olson said it was important to give Karadec a life beyond the casework. "I want these characters to be well-rounded," she said, adding that viewers can see Morgan and Karadec "really do have love for each other."
That mattered because the season did more than stir up romance. By the end, Lucia appeared to be heading for jail-time, and Wagner had been stabbed multiple times. The finale left his status unclear, while Steve Howey will not return as a full-time cast member in season 3. Those turns made the last stretch feel less like a tease and more like a show willing to let its relationship drama spill into real danger.
Olson said the love-triangle energy was never meant to be simple. "For me, it's so fun to lead people down a road where you're like, 'Oh, are they falling in love, or are they just really good friends? Maybe they're falling in love, or maybe they're just friends, or maybe they're just really good partners,'" she said. "But sometimes those lines get crossed, sometimes feelings get confusing, sometimes you have feelings for someone and then you put it onto someone else."
That leaves the biggest open thread sitting outside the Morgan-Karadec loop: Roman. Morgan's unseen ex may finally appear next season after years of absence, and Olson said her character would probably react with "very, very confusing" feelings and "a lot of anger" if he showed up alive and well after missing most of his daughter's life. "But no matter where he was, if he's still alive, and he has stayed away from her and his daughter for this long, I think she's going to be livid," Olson said.
That is where the show seems headed now. The season 2 finale kept Morgan and Karadec on the edge of something without forcing a label, cleared room by moving Lucia out of the picture, and set up Roman as the next emotional collision. If season 3 follows Olson's read, the question is no longer whether Morgan and Karadec care about each other. They do. The question is what happens when the man she never stopped waiting for finally walks back in.