Pluribus Season 1 ended with a shocking cliffhanger, but the final episode also had other revelations that surprised both Carol (played by Rhea Seehorn) and the viewers. Carol now has an atom bomb and wants to help Manousos. But she wouldn't have asked for the bomb had she not felt so betrayed by the Others, specifically Zosia. In the final episode of Season 1, Zosia confesses to Carol that she and the Others have been trying to extract Carol's stem cells from her frozen eggs to make a custom virus to infect her with, and are very close to completing the process.This revelation is a huge betrayal because Carol had clearly not consented for her stem cells to be used when she learned that every immune person's consent was needed. Besides, Zosia, the one person she had trusted, has broken her trust. Now, Carol has to find a way to stop the Others and also distance herself from Zosia, with whom she thought she had a connection. Rhea Seehorn, who plays Carol Sturka in Pluribus, opened up about her character in an interview, helping viewers understand Carol better.Rhea Seehorn on what Carol goes through in Pluribus season finaleGiven the situation Carol is in, she feels immensely lonely, and thought she had found somebody she could trust and connect with, when she got to know Zosia better. While Carol has been trying to think of ways to reverse the Joining or help Others go back to normal, they have been plotting to make her a part of the hive mind against her consent. All of this comes to light in one episode and Carol is understandably angry, upset, and frustrated. Carol did not see this coming, and neither did Rhea Seehorn, who plays Carol in Pluribus. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostAfter the finale, Seehorn opened up about Carol in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, saying,"She’s so angry, but also so hurt. She just feels so incredibly betrayed. She had some real feelings for Zosia, and she feels like an idiot that she thought Zosia had real feelings for her. One can argue how you define real feelings, and I know that the Others would have a different definition of it. So it’s hard to even look at her during that last glance. In that moment, she just feels so betrayed; that’s the best way I can put it."What Seehorn said is probably what anyone watching the finale would also think of Carol, because what she's going through is a huge betrayal. Zosia's betrayal makes her question if she ever actually cared about Carol or if it all was a way to distract her from the Others making the custom virus behind her back. Seehorn continued,"It’s almost like, “Shame on you.” It’s almost like the way you would feel from a breakup where somebody has chosen to not just break up, but to do it in such a painful and humiliating way that didn’t need to be done. So she’s very, very angry, but she’s vulnerable enough that it’s more about receding than even attacking at that point."While it does feel like a breakup, and Carol feels stupid for trusting Zosia and believing she cared about her, Carol doesn't lose her focus. She knows what she has to do, and instead of attacking or blaming, she chooses to plan, and we've already seen a glimpse of it in the season finale. Whether Carol will intentionally hurt the others is unknown, but she sure has a plan and we'll see it all come to fruition in Pluribus Season 2, which has been confirmed, but won't be arriving too soon. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostPluribus is created by Vince Gilligan, who also serves as the showrunner and an executive producer. Other executive producers on the show are Jeff Frost, Diane Mercer, Allyce Ozarski, Gordon Smith, and Alison Tatlock. The production companies behind the show are High Bridge Productions, Bristol Circle Entertainment, and Sony Pictures Television.Pluribus is streamimg on Apple TV.For more articles like this, follow Soapcentral.