NCIS: Origins Season 2 Episode 7 Recap: A Secret Revealed Puts Wheeler’s Future on the Line

NCIS: Origins Season 2 on CBS (Image via YouTube / AXN Asia)

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The latest episode of NCIS: Origins turned up the emotional pressure in a big way. While the team investigated the murder of a promising Marine, the personal struggles of the showโ€™s characters reached a boiling point, especially for one key agent.

Episode 7, titled โ€œCrazy Little Thing Called Love,โ€ aired on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, on CBS. It explored heavy themes of loneliness and the painful need for secrecy in a different time, putting the personal and professional life of Cliff Wheeler at the center of the story.

The Team’s Critical New Case

The episode opened with a new case for Mike Franks and the team. They were called in to investigate the murder of Lance Corporal Natasha Horvet, a Marine who had just been handpicked for a top-secret mission involving signal intelligence. Her body was found on the outskirts of the base, showing signs of a stabbing and a subsequent animal attack.

The initial investigation was unusual. The team believed a local cougar might have interfered with the crime scene, leading them to search for the animal. This brought them into contact with a group of intense animal activists the team nicknamed the โ€œCougar Crazies,โ€ one of whom was later arrested after causing a disturbance at the station. The evidence pointed them toward Lieutenant Colonel Casey Montgomery, the officer who had selected Natasha for her mission.

During questioning, Montgomery provided a solid alibi, stating he had spent the night at a motel with his male lover after dropping Natasha off at base. This revelation created an immediate and serious conflict for the team, particularly for Cliff Wheeler.

Wheeler’s Personal Life Unravels at Work

While the case developed, Cliff Wheeler was dealing with a personal crisis. His wife, Shelly, who had long known about his secret relationship with FBI Detective Noah Oakley, decided to finally divorce him. Her motivation was to leave before Wheeler might be publicly exposed and fired under the militaryโ€™s strict โ€œDonโ€™t Ask, Donโ€™t Tellโ€ policy, which was in effect during the 1990s setting of the show.

Overwhelmed by the stress of his collapsing home life and the constant fear of being discovered, Wheeler had a public breakdown at the office. In a moment of sheer frustration, he yelled out the news of his impending divorce to the entire bullpen.

โ€œHe was the kind of guy that spent a lot of time alone,โ€ Mark Harmon narrated as the older Gibbs, framing Wheelerโ€™s profound isolation. โ€œAlone in his big office with the door shut. He spent a lot of time alone at home, tooโ€ฆ He seemed like the kind of guy that wanted to be heardโ€.

His secret relationship with Noah was his only source of comfort, a safe space where someone genuinely cared about his day. However, this very secret was now his greatest vulnerability.

A Moral Dilemma Tests Loyalty and Law

The investigation took a critical turn when Lieutenant Colonel Montgomeryโ€™s alibi forced Wheeler into an impossible position. As an officer, Wheeler felt a duty to report Montgomeryโ€™s homosexuality, as it was considered a security risk and a violation of military conduct at the time. Reporting him would likely destroy Montgomeryโ€™s career and pension.

Mary Jo Hayes saw Wheeler struggling with this decision and intervened in a powerful way. She revealed that she had known about Wheelerโ€™s relationship with Noah for some time. In a tense confrontation, she refused to let him make the report, arguing that he would never be able to forgive himself for ruining another manโ€™s life when he was living the same secret.

โ€œIโ€™m going to walk out of here, and Iโ€™m going to keep this whole place running because thatโ€™s the job I do here,โ€ Mary Jo told him. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll tell you what, Cliff, you can dial your own damn phoneโ€.

Mary Joโ€™s bold stand worked. Wheeler chose not to report Colonel Montgomery, extending a grace that he himself desperately needed. In the end, the killer was found to be a technician who had briefly spent time with Natasha. He attacked her after she refused to pursue a relationship beyond a single kiss. A unique โ€œWhatever Weatherโ€ pen that Randy had admired earlier became the key piece of evidence that identified the culprit.

Other Team Dynamics and a Look to Alaska

The episode also checked in on other members of the team. Lala was upset to learn that her close friend Vera was applying for a permanent job with a joint criminal intelligence team in Washington, D.C., without telling her. The news made Lala feel abandoned, but the two eventually reconciled when Vera decided she would rather try to build a similar team on the West Coast instead of leaving.

On a lighter note, Gibbs and his girlfriend Diane Sterling went on a double date with Randy and his wife, Junie, showing a more personal side of Gibbsโ€™s life as his relationship deepens.

The episode was bookended by reflective voiceovers from Mark Harmon as the present-day Gibbs, living in Alaska. His closing words sparked questions about the characterโ€™s future.

โ€œI spent a lot of my time aloneโ€ฆ You push people away until they leave. Or you go someplace no one can follow, like the middle of Alaska,โ€ Gibbs mused. โ€œI learned to like being alone, or maybe thatโ€™s just the thing I tell myself until someone shows up to share a steak by the fireโ€.

This line has led to fan speculation about whether someone from Gibbsโ€™s past might eventually join him in his remote retreat.

As for Wheeler, he ended the episode by mending his friendship with Mary Jo and sadly recommending his partner, Noah, for the very job in D.C. that Vera wanted, creating physical distance to better protect his secret. The fallout from his divorce and the constant pressure of his hidden life continue to shape his path.

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