惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

T
Threatpost
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
J
Java Code Geeks
博客园_首页
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
I
Intezer
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
雷峰网
雷峰网
O
OpenAI News
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
小众软件
小众软件
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
美团技术团队
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
Project Zero
Project Zero
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
IT之家
IT之家
A
Arctic Wolf
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Jina AI
Jina AI
T
Tor Project blog
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
S
Secure Thoughts
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
博客园 - 聂微东
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
P
Privacy International News Feed
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
博客园 - 叶小钗
H
Hacker News: Front Page
腾讯CDC
量子位
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
月光博客
月光博客
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
爱范儿
爱范儿
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes

TIME

How to Watch the TIME100 Gala Red Carpet Livestream Why Epstein Survivors Should Testify Before Congress What to Know About the U.K.’s Generational Smoking Ban With ‘Donnyland,’ Ukraine Becomes Latest to Propose Naming Something After Trump Iran’s Supreme Leader No Longer Reigns Supreme What the Passage of the Virginia Redistricting Plan Means for Control of Congress Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Defends Spending Cuts to Health Agencies Breaking Down the Chilling Ending of Unchosen What to Know About Allegations Against Rep. Cory Mills Amid Calls for Expulsion From Congress Mexico’s President Calls For Investigation After CIA Members Killed in Cartel Operation Democratic Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick Resigns Ahead of Potential Ethics Sanctions What to Know About Trump’s New Executive Order on Psychedelic Drugs With Michael, the King of Pop Gets a Not-So-Regal Biopic Can a Documentary Help End Gang Violence? Trump Order to Require Banks to Collect Citizenship Info 'In Process,' Bessent Says A Muslim Faith Leader on the Failures That Led to the Iran War, and What Comes Next Trump Says U.S. Will Extend Cease-Fire With Iran Baby Reindeer Creator's Half Man Tests Our Tolerance for Pain. But to What End? What to Know About Shooting at Pyramid in Mexico and Security Concerns for World Cup How American Schools Can Address Political Polarization What to Know About the Louisiana Shooting That Killed 8 Children ‘Dark Money’ Floods Virginia Redistricting Fight, With Millions Linked to Peter Thiel Trump Accuses Iran of ‘Total Violation’ as Strait of Hormuz Remains Shut This Halal Beauty Company Boss Has Big Ambitions What to Know About Allegations of Excessive Drinking by FBI Director Kash Patel Iran Reimposes Control of Strait of Hormuz and Fires on Tankers Welcome to the Second Gilded Age Why the Federal Government Is Making Chicago O’Hare Airport Cut Hundreds of Flights a Day Lee Cronin's The Mummy Is Not a Brendan Fraser Movie. It's Way More Cursed May Bob Odenkirk Always Have as Much Fun as He's Having in Normal What We Know About the ‘Massive’ Military Complex Being Built Beneath the White House The Bigger Energy Lesson Behind Iran’s Control Over the Strait of Hormuz Trump Nominates Dr. Erica Schwartz as CDC Director Even If You Think You're SNL'ed Out, Lorne Offers Some New Angles on Lorne Michaels Modern Dating Is Making Us Less Secure How Businesses Can Apply for Tariff Refunds Through New Portal How Hormuz Could Shape China’s Taiwan Strategy State Department Cracks Down on Visas of People ‘Working on Behalf of U.S. Adversaries’ Israeli Troops to Stay in Southern Lebanon Despite Ceasefire, Netanyahu Says Here’s How to Best Watch the Lyrid Meteor Shower House Democrats Move to Impeach Defense Secretary Hegseth Trump’s Feud With the U.K. Over North Sea Oil: What to Know What The Pitt Says About Burnout, and Why Self-Care Won’t Solve It The Seven Democrats Who Joined Republicans in Opposing Measure to Block Arms Sales to Israel The Looming Risk of Too Many Satellites and Debris in Space 'It's Not Working': Diplomats Fear Trump's Iran Envoys Are Making Things Worse Why Trump’s Strait of Hormuz Blockade May Be a Gift to China Trump Has Abandoned His Affordability Promises Letting AI Do Your Work Erodes Your Confidence, According to a New Study What to Know About the Live Nation Verdict and Its Effect on Ticket Prices Philanthropy Must Choose Courage Over Caution How AI Can Beat Cancer Breaking Down the Action-Packed, Haunting Finale of 'Beef' Season 2 ‘No More Excuses’: Europe Announces Age Verification App in Effort to Crack Down on Social Media Love Is War in Beef's Imperfect But Still Thrilling Second Season U.S. Takes Step Closer to Popular Vote for Presidential Elections as Virginia Joins Compact Senate Blocks Iran War Powers Resolution for Fourth Time ‘It Beats Pitchfork Rebellions and the Guillotine’: Why These Super-Rich Americans Are Asking For Higher Taxes Trump Says Iran War ‘Close to Over,’ Hints at Possible Deadline Ahead of Royal Visit TIME Is Looking For the World's Top HealthTech Companies of 2026 The Neuroscience of the Self Amid Trump's Blockade, Threat of Escalation Leaves Thousands of U.S. Forces on High Alert Shirin Ebadi Rauw Alejandro: The 100 Most Influential People of 2026 Walter Hood Kica Matos Chloe Kim Victoria Beckham American Men Are Set to Be Automatically Registered for the Draft Hungary’s Viktor Orbán Ousted by Voters After 16 Years in Power. Here’s What That Means Medicaid Cuts Could Force More Kids to Become Caregivers Trump Says U.S. Will Blockade Strait of Hormuz After Iran Peace Talks Fail Eric Swalwell Resigns from Congress How Trump’s Proposed Triumphal Arch Stacks Up Against Others Around the World Trump Says U.S. Has Begun ‘Clearing Out’ Strait of Hormuz As Iran Peace Talks Begin The Big Unanswered Question about the Tracking of ICE Observers How NASA Achieved the Historic Artemis II Splashdown Watch Live: Artemis II Crew Returns to Earth Is a Super El Niño Coming in 2026? Here’s What Scientists Are Saying What ‘Emotional Flooding’ Really Means—And How to Handle It What to Know About the U.S. Postal Service’s ‘Severe Financial Crisis’ Israel's War Against Lebanon, Explained America’s Cost-of-Living Crisis Is Really a Pay Crisis Netflix Shark Thriller Thrash Doesn't Know What Kind of Creature Feature It Wants to Be Calls to Impeach Trump Collide With Reluctant Democratic Leadership J.P. Morgan Is Thinking About Climate Tipping Points Why the U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Won’t Last You, Me & Tuscany Delivers Everything It Promises—Including Tomatoes The Christophers Is One of the Best Movies of the Year So Far Not Even Keanu Reeves Can Breathe Life Into the Painfully Unfunny Outcome Breaking Down the Ending of The Miniature Wife Starmer Says He's 'Fed Up' With Trump as Europe Splinters From U.S. Over Iran War What Jamie Raskin Will Tell House Democrats About the 25th Amendment and Impeachment Euphoria Returns, Older But Not Wiser ‘A Perfect Storm’: How AI Is Transforming the Global Scam Industry Women’s Brains Are a $1 Trillion Opportunity Is Hungarian Leader Viktor Orbán, an Icon of the Far Right, About to Be Ousted by Voters? White House Reportedly Warns Staff Against Insider Trading As Lawmakers Raise Concerns Bondi Won’t Testify as Scheduled in House Epstein Probe. Lawmakers Are Threatening to Hold Her in Contempt Melania Trump Says Lies Linking Her to Jeffrey Epstein ‘Need to End’
Breaking Down the Twist Ending of Harlan Coben's Mystery Series 'I Will Find You'
Isadora Wandermurem · 2026-06-19 · via TIME

Warning: This post contains spoilers for I Will Find You
The Netflix thriller series I Will Find You, based on Harlan Coben’s 2023 novel, opens with a case that appears to be closed: David Burroughs (Sam Worthington) is serving a life sentence for the murder of his son, Matthew Burroughs—who was found dead in his own bed.

Everything changes when David gets a visitor in prison one day. Journalist Rachel Mills (Britt Lower)—who happens to be the sister of David’s ex-wife Cheryl (Erin Richards)—shows up with a photo taken at Six Flags. In the background of the image is a boy who looks exactly like Matthew, even bearing the same birthmark he had on his cheek.  

“She's a character who just can't ignore an uneasy feeling. She has this spidey sense that this might be her nephew,” Lower says. “She goes from being a journalist writing about other people to being directly inside the story.”

The photo pushes David—who has maintained his innocence all along—to escape from prison with the help of Philip Mackenzie (Peter Outerbridge), the prison warden and a longtime friend of his father who believes him, and Mackenzie’s son Adam (Jonathan Tucker), a police sargeant.

“A father’s job is to protect his child… and so he failed at that. It’s all about trying to find that redemption,” says Coben, who also served as an executive producer on the show. “It was the chance to rescue his son and recover from the worst moment of his life.”
According to creator and showrunner Robert Hull, there were no essential changes in adapting the novel for the screen. “It was just finding new ways to tell the story,” he says. “Harlan, early on, gave us a roadmap so we know where we’re going and what the heart of the show is, so we never lose sight of that. If you’re a fan of the book, everything you love is there, plus a lot.”
Let’s break down the biggest twists in I Will Find You.

A search for truth

David and Rachel trace Matthew’s disappearance to Berg Reproductive, a Boston fertility clinic tied to the wealthy Payne family, headed by Gertrude Payne (Madeleine Stowe) and her son Hayden Payne (Milo Ventimiglia), and learn that Cheryl had been a patient there.  She used Rachel’s name during treatment to keep it secret. Cheryl later reveals she discovered she was pregnant the next day after the procedure, confirming Matthew is David’s biological son. 

The discovery leads David to believe Rachel, not Cheryl, was the intended target of the scheme that ultimately led to Matthew’s disappearance, and that Berg is tied to the conspiracy.
FBI agent Sarah Greer (Logan Browning) begins to question David’s sentencing. She works alongside her father, FBI agent Max Williams (Chi McBride), as part of Boston’s fugitive task force, and although they were not particularly close before, their partnership on the job has brought them closer.

Browning says that doubt comes from instinct. “She sees a father in his desperation. And she's familiar with her dad's desperation to be in her life again in whatever way that is.” Max, however, remains focused on bringing David back into custody. “For Max, this case doesn't change his life in any way,” McBride says. “In the end, he can now prioritize his relationship with his daughter.”
Meanwhile, Swiss investigator Müller arrives in Boston with a theory that the body found at Matthew’s bed may belong to a missing child from a Payne-run orphanage. Hayden—heir to the Payne family and Rachel’s former boyfriend—positions himself as an ally. But Rachel later uncovers Six Flags photos showing him holding Matthew’s hand, linking him directly to the disappearance. David, Rachel, and agent Greer move in on the Payne estate as the case unravels.

“They've been played for suckers all the way through,” Worthington says. “That character's trying to help our characters. It's a big betrayal in that respect. And then an even bigger emotional betrayal for Rachel.”

Who was the boy found dead?

The boy found in David’s home was Martin Bischoff, a Swiss child taken years earlier from a murder scene in Geneva after the deaths of his guardians.

He later lived in a Payne-run orphanage, where he disappeared shortly before Matthew’s alleged death. He matched Matthew in age and appearance but suffered from metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD). A later blood test confirmed the body was Martin, not Matthew.

What happened that night?

For years, the official version stated that 3-year-old Matthew Burroughs was murdered in his bed, and David was convicted based on evidence including a bloodied baseball bat, a neighbor’s testimony claiming she saw him bury the bat in a forest, and his history of sleep terrors.
It is later revealed that the neighbor lied at the request of Nicky Fisher, a Boston mobster seeking revenge against Lenny, David’s retired police officer father, after the death of his own son in prison.
Hayden Payne killed Martin Bischoff, placed his body in Matthew’s place, and manipulated DNA evidence through the Payne family to confirm the victim as Matthew. He then took the real Matthew and raised him as Theo for five years.

Ashton Cressman as Matthew Courtesy of Netflix

Why Hayden kidnapped Matthew

Hayden believed he was Matthew’s biological father. When Cheryl used Rachel’s name at Berg Reproductive clinic, he assumed Rachel was the patient and provided his genetic material for the procedure.

Years later, after seeing Matthew at a barbecue with Rachel’s family, he realized the child was Cheryl’s, but still believed the boy was his son. At the Payne mansion, Rachel reveals that Cheryl was already pregnant at the time of the procedure. Gertrude confirms a paternity test was conducted, though she never told Hayden the truth about its results.

As David and Agent Greer leave with Matthew, Hayden shoots his mother and flees with Rachel.

How does I Will Find You end?

Hayden pushes Rachel and tries to escape with Matthew, but David catches him. In the struggle, Hayden shoots David. Agent Greer orders him to drop the weapon. Hayden breaks down, saying Matthew was the best thing in his life. Rachel tries to talk him down, but he turns the gun on her. Greer shoots and kills him. David, gravely injured, looks at Matthew and says: “I found you,” before losing consciousness.

For Hull, the emotional weight of that scene comes less from the act itself than from everything that leads into it. “I think for a successful ending, it’s not about the ending, it’s about everything that came before. It’s about everything that he had to go through to get to that moment,” he says. “That’s what makes a Harlan Coben show successful—because of the journey you’ve taken with David and Rachel over this time, you get to feel what he feels in the end.”

Eight months later, David’s conviction is overturned and the truth about Matthew’s case begins to spread in the media. Rachel publishes her account as a book. Cheryl has a daughter with her current husband, and the family gathers at the funeral for Lenny, David’s father, who died of colon cancer. Matthew still struggles to recover his memories but is trying. In the final moment, David says he will always find his son again while holding Rachel’s hand.
“I was glad it didn’t end in this big romantic gesture. There’s a gentleness and a simplicity. Sometimes a power comes through a gentle and simple gesture. It’s OK to be open ended. That’s hope. We leave that in the audience’s hands,” Worthington says.

Lower agrees. "They’re just observing their family finally together. They’ve earned that moment, to have each other’s back. Who knows what the future will bring, but it’s a good foundation. They’ve been through hell together."