Monday's episode revealed that after breaking things off with Jimmy/Saul (Bob Odenkirk), Kim shockingly moved down to Florida to live out the rest of her days. Fans were relieved to learn that Wexler was alive.
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.
The show ended with Kim visiting Saul in prison, and the pair shared a cigarette like they used to do when they were married and they spoke about the future. While discussing his 87-year sentence Saul said that "with good behavior" he may well get out earlier.
Following her car crash, Kim Wexler's broken arm has been put in a cast. She returns with Jimmy to the site of the crash and Jimmy picks up her scattered papers. The following morning, Jimmy feels responsible for her accident because she took on a second client partially to help pay for their shared office space.
Kim suggests that Jimmy and her get married halfway through the fifth season simply as a means to protect her in case she has to testify against him in court, and they have one of those 15 minute courthouse weddings with Huell Babnieaux (Lavell Crawford) serving as their only audience member.
Saul Goodman's been Married Twice: Season Three Episode Four | Fandom. In the fourth episode of season three, Saul Goodman tells Walter White that he caught his second wife cheating on him with his step-dad. That means he was married twice.
She tells Jimmy that they are bad for one another—that the chaos they've created together is too much for her conscience, despite having “the time of [her] life” doing it. She cancels her own law license, packs her bags, and leaves Saul for an unknown destination.
Others wondered if Wexler was secretly fine and just working at the same mall as Gene (aka Saul Goodman), living her own secret life. Neither was true. Monday's episode revealed that after breaking things off with Jimmy/Saul (Bob Odenkirk), Kim shockingly moved down to Florida to live out the rest of her days.
She knows she can't live with the Howard-Lalo baggage, pretending everything is normal. Before she dumps Jimmy, she resigns from the New Mexico Bar Association. Her reasons for leaving behind her career as an attorney are not explicit, though they're alluded to in a separate story line when Mike meets with Nacho's dad.
But finally, Saul's luck runs out. Everywhere he turns, there are cops. After hiding in a dumpster, Saul tries to dig out a phone to call Ed the Disappearer, but he fumbles everything he's holding and the police find him.
Jimmy and Kim share a few final scenes during the Better Call Saul series finale. The pair doesn't get a happy ending, but they leave things on a brighter note than before.
Saul gives Michal to another man (1 Sam 25:44) in an apparent move to block David from claiming the kingship through her. After Saul's death, when it is politically expedient, David demands the return of his wife in his negotiations over the kingship (1 Samuel 3).
Similarly, on “Breaking Bad,” Saul mentions a second ex-wife, and there's a deleted scene from the show where he says he has three ex-wives, total.
Saul failed to obey Samuel's instructions. He lacked the faith and self-discipline to wait for Samuel to meet him in Gilgal. Here is the sad history. “And he tarried seven days, according to the set time that Samuel had appointed: but Samuel came not to Gilgal; and the people were scattered from him” (1 Samuel 13:8).
A potential indicator of Kim Wexler's future is the color blue, which she wears repeatedly throughout Better Call Saul. Though the meaning behind color in Breaking Bad is wide open to interpretation, one possible reading of blue tones is purity and innocence - but always with tragic consequences.
Rather than pretend to flee as planned so that Victor can kill him quickly, Nacho uses a piece of broken glass to free himself from his zip tie, seize Juan's gun, and kill himself. The Cousins then assist Hector to fire bullets into Nacho's lifeless body.
In addition, those earrings signify Mrs. Wexler's acceptance of a crime, insinuating that this was the moment that Kim started to question her beliefs regarding crime. The fact that Kim has worn those earrings since she was a teenager means that she's still carrying around the tragedies of her past.
Kim Wexler and Jimmy McGill break up in 'Better Call Saul' Season 6. Fans finally learn Kim's fate in “Fun and Games.” After attending Howard Hamlin's (Patrick Fabian) memorial at HHM where she had an awkward exchange with Howard's wife, Cheryl (Sandrine Holt), Kim made moves that drastically altered her life.
7 One day Ishbosheth, Saul's son, accused Abner of sleeping with one of his father's concubines, a woman named Rizpah, daughter of Aiah.
Michal, daughter of Saul, married David. In love with David, Michal proved her loyalty to her husband over her father when she saved David from her father's attack on his life.
After Michal was returned to David, she criticised him for dancing in an undignified manner, as he brought the Ark of the Covenant to the newly captured Jerusalem in a religious procession. For this she is punished, according to Samuel, with not having children till the day she dies.
No, Saul and Kim do not end up back together romantically but they do get a happier ending than you may have been anticipating.