Miss Scarlet And The Duke - Season 4 -
The game has changed. For three seasons, fans of the hit PBS Masterpiece series Miss Scarlet and The Duke have been hooked not only by the intricate Victorian-era whodunits but also by the tantalizing, slow-burn chemistry between its two titular characters: the fiery, independent female detective Eliza Scarlet and the stoic, rule-bound Scotland Yard Inspector William "The Duke" Wellington.
To survive, Eliza takes a case involving a missing aristocrat’s daughter. This case forces her to team up with the one man she swore she never would: Alexander Blake (Tom Durant-Pritchard), a charismatic, roguish ex-convict turned informant. If the Duke is order, Alexander Blake is chaos. Introduced as a morally grey fixer with a silk scarf and a silver tongue, Blake is the most dangerous addition to Season 4. He isn't interested in rules; he is interested in results. Miss Scarlet and the Duke - Season 4
This moment defines Season 4. Eliza Scarlet is no longer a girl waiting to be chosen. She is a woman deciding who is worthy of her partnership. By the finale, she kisses Blake—not with passion, but with calculation. It is a kiss of acceptance, not surrender. The final episode brings the Duke back for one crucial scene. William Wellington returns to London to collect his remaining belongings. Seeing Eliza running the agency with Blake by her side, the Duke has a moment of quiet devastation. Stuart Martin plays this with heartbreaking subtlety—a single tear, a forced smile, and a goodbye that feels permanent. The game has changed
For those willing to let go of the past, Season 4 offers the sharpest writing, the highest stakes, and the most authentic portrayal of a single, working woman in the 19th century since Victoria . Stream it on PBS Masterpiece or Amazon Prime Video. Just bring tissues—not for the mystery, but for the goodbye. This case forces her to team up with
The chemistry between Phillips and Durant-Pritchard is electric but entirely different from her dynamic with Martin. Where the Duke represented safety and frustration, Blake represents temptation and danger. He challenges Eliza’s rigid morality, asking her, "If you catch the killer but ruin an innocent man’s life to do it, are you still a good detective?"