Chuck leaves most of his estate to his ex-wife, with only a $5,000 bequest to Jimmy, which is just enough to prevent him from contesting the will. When Kim picks up Jimmy's inheritance check, Howard gives her a letter Chuck wrote to Jimmy. Kim eventually gives it to Jimmy, who reads it in her presence.
Their mother's dying words were for Jimmy, not the good brother Chuck. Chuck thought he deserved more, he considered Jimmy a worthless pile of trash and treated him as such. His greatest regret was getting Jimmy off the trumped up and nonsensical sexual assault charge, which, in Chuck's mind, made Jimmy his debtor.
decided to agree to the offer that the Sandpiper Crossing clients offered to the residents, meaning that Jimmy and Kim did indeed win.
Dear Jimmy, I have left many things unsaid in our relationship through the years. Rather than allow these unspoken thoughts to die with me, I've chosen to record them here for you. I hope you will take my words in the spirit in which they are intended.
He believes that Jimmy with a law degree is dangerous and an insult to the legal profession, and rationalizes his conniving and betrayal as serving the greater good. Chuck later hatches a scheme to have his brother disbarred.
Chuck leaves most of his estate to his ex-wife, with only a $5,000 bequest to Jimmy, which is just enough to prevent him from contesting the will. When Kim picks up Jimmy's inheritance check, Howard gives her a letter Chuck wrote to Jimmy. Kim eventually gives it to Jimmy, who reads it in her presence.
Likewise, Chuck likely felt regret in the way he treated Jimmy and realized that if he had not been so antagonistic to his brother in the past, his present would be much different.
Jimmy even refused to properly acknowledge his brother's death or consider that his actions might've pushed Chuck to suicide. The only way Jimmy could avoid the emotional fallout of Chuck's death was by having no feelings on the topic whatsoever, which explained his callous letter reaction.
Kim wrote the letter
She wrote a new one trying to say nice things that maybe would make Jimmy grieve in a normal way. When Jimmy didn't seem to care about the letter, Kim was racked with guilt and that's why she wound up crying.
Jimmy quickly shifted the blame onto Howard, further fueling his distaste for the lawyer that would ultimately lead to Howard's death at the hands of Lalo Salamanca. However, a brief moment in the flashforward to Jimmy's new life as Gene Takavic heavily implies that he still feels guilty for Chuck's death.
Jeff, also known as Jeffie, is an eccentric and suspicious cab driver from Omaha, Nebraska, previously residing in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He is the son of Marion and a friend of Buddy. Jeff recognizes Jimmy McGill as Saul Goodman while Jimmy was under his Gene Takavic identity in Omaha.
Before he met Walt and Jesse, Saul had dealt with many other drug lords. For example, in Better Call Saul, he charged Lalo $100,000 just to pick up a stack of cash. By combining his legal income with the cuts he gets by making the wishes of gangsters come true, his net worth could easily sum up to the tens of millions.
The ultracompetent attorney who married Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk), the man most likely to bring out the shadier side of her character, never appears in Breaking Bad, which led some viewers to assume she would die before Saul finished its run. But as Monday's series finale confirmed, Kim Wexler lives on.
One of the subplots of the show follows Chuck's obsessive compulsive order (OCD), a mental illness where people suffer from intrusive thoughts and compulsions.
Antisocial personality disorder
The arc of his character is carefully constructed to resist moralizing.
He knows deep down that Chuck's ailment and eventual death has to do with his actions. But that truth is too painful for Jimmy to face. Chuck was a nasty older brother in Jimmy's eyes. When Jimmy tried to do right by him, and got a law degree before practicing, he was met with disgust.
He was angry because of what Chuck said to him. He was angry with himself for allowing Chuck to affect him. He was mostly angry that the brother he wanted, the brother he thought he had, never truly existed, he wasted his life catering to his needs, always trying to please Chuck.
And by the way, she wants to set the record straight: “Kim did not write Chuck's letter.” Saul's writers confirmed to her that Jimmy's late brother really did write the letter Jimmy received after his death. It wasn't her character's invention, as some fans have theorized.
Despite Kim and Jimmy's unconditional love for each other, Kim left him and Albuquerque after one of their schemes went horribly wrong, causing her to believe that they were bad for everyone around them. She subsequently retired permanently from her law career, and divorced Jimmy later that year.
After Jimmy returns, Chuck tells Jimmy their mother has died and falsely claims she had no last words.
Chuck thought he deserved more, he considered Jimmy a worthless pile of trash and treated him as such. His greatest regret was getting Jimmy off the trumped up and nonsensical sexual assault charge, which, in Chuck's mind, made Jimmy his debtor.
He Never Told Jimmy Their Mother's Dying Words
When he leaves, their mother wakes up. She ignores Chuck and only cries out for Jimmy. Then, she passes away.
The series also showed us just what happened to Saul/Jimmy after his association with Walter White (Bryan Cranston): He fled to Omaha under a new identity (Gene) and worked as a baker at a shopping-mall Cinnabon. This final episode brings all three of his personae together as Jimmy, Gene and Saul's worlds collide.
While Chuck's condition is real in the sense that EHS is inspired by real life, it's certainly not real in the traditional sense. Like anti-vaccination and climate change being a hoax, EHS is the result of false information spreading and seizing advantage of those with existing psychological conditions.
Jimmy cross-examines Chuck, using Mike's photos of the interior of his house to question him about his state of mind at the time he taped Jimmy's confession. Jimmy further confronts Chuck about how close he has to be to an electrical object to be affected by his EHS.