Fans of the "Blindspot" will have to prove their patience as the NBC drama is taking a mid-season break until the end of February.

But writers at least awarded the followers of Special Agent Kurt Weller and his Critical Incident Response Group with a romance-packed fall finale, Design and Trend reported.

Weller, played by Australian actor Sullivan Stapleton, managed to finally kiss the mysterious Jane Doe in "Evil Handmade Instrument," which aired on Nov. 23. Jane Doe, interpreted by "Thor" star Jaimie Alexander, is a supposedly amnesiac woman whose true background and story continue to be a mystery to Weller and viewers alike.

Nevertheless, the entanglement with the FBI agent marks a turning point in her character development, "Blindspot" producer Martin Gero told TVLine.

"Jane is really cementing her role in the team, and finally kissing Weller and feeling good about it," the 38-year-old Swiss-Canadian screenwriter explained. "Maybe for the first time since she came out of that bag, she felt like she was on stable ground," Gero added

Though the kiss marked a moment of happiness for the tatooed woman, things soon started to take a very bad turn in the episode when she was she was captured by a few associates of Tom Carter, the deputy Central Intelligence Agency director played by Michael Gaston, TV Line noted.

The kidnappers took Jane Doe to a middle-of-nowhere warehouse, where Carter himself tortured and waterboarded the captive in hopes that she might remember something about her confusing past, the website detailed.

The mysterious character is eventually saved by another shadowy figure, Oscar, who is bound to "really complicate things for Jane," Gero told Variety in an interview.

"And it's less Oscar complicating things and more this new knowledge of herself," the producer then clarified. "It's gonna make her extraordinarily uneasy, as you can imagine - it comes as quite a shock to her, and basically, she's trying to realign her entire worldview after tonight. So it will mean some complications for those two," Gero concluded.