For a), the product is neutral and so you are done after the nucleophile (Cl-) attacks the carbocation.
For b), the the intermediate is a protonated alcohol, and so you must do a proton exchange step (also called a hydrogen exchange or deprotonation) to get the final alcohol product, which is neutral.
For c), there are two different types of beta hydrogens, and so two different alkenes are possible.
The more stable alkene is the one that will form, and this will always be the most highly substituted alkene. This is Zaitsev's rule. The rationale for this is hyperconjugation: neighboring carbon atoms stabilize an alkene.