Tonight’s episode of How to Get Away with Murder promises to be chock full of tricks and twists, especially with next week being the winter finale and all.

With only two episodes left this fall, How to Get Away with Murder is ramping up to one hell of a conclusion. We’ve been seeing bits and pieces of what happens the night Annalise gets shot, but we aren’t any closer to knowing the real culprit behind her attempted murder than we were when we saw that startling first shot in the premiere. We even tried to figure it out a couple weeks ago to no avail.

There’s no shortage of other mysteries and questions to be solved though. We still need to know whether the Hapstalls killed their parents, whether or not Wes will ever find out who killed Rebekah, and who knows if we’ll ever know how Asher’s past mistakes will come back to bite him. There are a lot of things we want to see wrapped up before we start the long wait that is the winter hiatus.

When you add in the complication of Philip, the man the Keating Five have been hunting down for the Hapstall’s parents’ murders the last couple of weeks, this episode is setting up to be a doozy. Not to mention the fact that he snuck into Oliver and Connor’s place and startled our favorite hacker. All we can say is, Oliver better be okay at the end of this. This is non-negotiable.

Check out the synopsis, stills, and sneak peek below to get yourself prepped and ready for tonight’s undoubtedly crazy episode.

Synopsis

“Philip makes a threatening move and ADA Sinclair may have figured out a way to take down Annalise. Meanwhile, Catherine and Caleb are forced to make a life changing decision.”

Stills

Sneak Peeks

Annalise is excited to see that Emily Sinclair is ready to offer plea deals. Prof Keating is pretty sure that she’s got the prosecutor on the ropes, and this is just more evidence to that. Despite Annalise’s pleasant reaction to the meeting, the Hapstalls are worried. It may be clear to a legal professional that 15 years is just a bargaining tool to get them to take the deal, but to anyone not so legal-ese minded, 15 years in prison sounds much easier to swallow than life or the death penalty.