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If you know my Person of Interest fandom then you know I like it when the show sets up new formidable adversaries who come with a story that can play out over a season (or two). And so it was cool to see that the gang from the Season 4 premiere, the Brotherhood, wasn't just a one-shot deal. And while not every aspect of this week's episode, "Brotherhood," stuck the landing, the whole "easy to spot twist followed by a super-clever, thematically-appropriate twist" was undeniably fun.Because you could spot Agent Lennox (Rosie Benton) being the DEA mole as soon as she brought it up. So my spirits sunk a little bit during the stretch of the episode where Reese somehow also didn't spot the oncoming swerve. But the true twist came at the end when it was revealed that "Mini" (Winston Duke) was actually Dominic. And that came right after a moment on the show when I thought they'd reveal Elias was the true secret leader behind the gang. Yeah, I know that Elias helped Reese take down the Brotherhood's "whale" house in the premiere, but I still felt it was a workable maneuver.Anyhow, Dominic being who he was also instantly retro-explained why we spent so much of the episode watching Shaw talk to Mini. And why he was being given even more of a spotlight than Link was, when Link was more or less the head of the gang in our eyes. "Mystery Man" Dominic excluded, of course. Anyhow, I liked that Dominic was hiding in plain sight. Much like Elias did back in Season 1. And much like our heroes do now to hide from Samaritan. In fact, Elias even tipped his hat a little bit to the technique when he made a remark about Finch now being a teacher ("I played that humble role myself once").The Malcolm and Tracy part of the episode was fine. I was never quite sure how they happened across the money in the first place or what exactly went wrong between the Brotherhood and the Armenians (was it simply what Lennox said happened? Was she there too?), but it got the story moving and things definitely improved from there.And what I really enjoy about the Brotherhood is that they're a cut above the normal street crime that Reese and Shaw would usually squash without breaking much of a sweat. They're smarter, more ambitious, and don't work out of a territory. Plus, it makes sense to have a new threat around, other than Samaritan, so that Team Machine will have to constantly place themselves at risk of being discovered as the Brotherhood grows. Because even Samaritan's operative, Martine, caught wind of something suspicious back in "Panopticon."Also, Dominic, who was already wise enough to know that Shaw was tracking him, can now connect Shaw to "Detective Riley." And know that they're both working for someone. It won't be long now before the gang's several steps ahead of our saviors. And since I don't know for sure that we'll ever revisit the Malcolm and Tracy characters, the ending offered up grim tidings. After we watched the kids get great news from Reese (new foster home, a lawyer's card, etc), Dominic looked ready and willing to reverse all of that by springing their mom out of prison and recruiting Malcolm. A cool, morbid ending for what seemed to be a hopeful "case of the week."On top of all that, we got some cool Elias/Finch subway meetings, Fusco shooting out bad guys' legs (he's learned from the best), Shaw being all sweaty and interrogate-y, and Bear eating all of Finch's term papers. Root was missed, for sure, but her character comes with a built in "out" for whenever the show needs to take a break from The Machine.