Once Love goes to slit Joe's throat, he injects her with his own aconite. Joe explains that he realized Love was growing aconite in the garden and hoarded the antidote, which is adrenaline. Joe doses himself with adrenaline during dinner and therefore quickly regains movement. Love dies from the aconite.
It was because of their close similarities that Joe ended up killing her at the end of Season 3 after she tried to kill him first after realizing that she would never be enough to satisfy his bloodthirsty tendencies.
But, ICYMI, Love died at the hands of Joe in the season 3 finale. Let's rewind a bit. Throughout the third season, Joe and Love have extramarital affairs — Joe with Marienne, the Madre Linda librarian, and Love with Theo, the college student next door.
Unfortunately, no, she is not alive. But let's face it — given her particularly gruesome ending in the season 3 finale, the odds of her coming back to life were pretty slim. Showrunner Sera Gamble even confirmed her death back in October 2021.
Characters Killed by Love Quinn
Candace Stone - Stabbed in the throat by Love with a broken bottle. Sofia - Throat slashed by Love with a knife, shown in a flashback. Natalie Engler - Hacked in the neck by Love with an axe off-screen. James Kennedy - Accidentally poisoned by Love with aconite off-screen, mentioned.
Realizing that he might have to protect Henry from himself — or a life in the foster care system should Love and Joe both be revealed as murderers — Joe drops his baby off at the home of co-worker Dante (Ben Mehl) after Love's death.
Joe left Los Angeles—where he faked his own death, blamed it on Love (literally and figuratively), gave his son Henry to their neighbors, and fled to Paris in search of Marienne, his one true love (this time for real).
True love never dies meaning is wrapped up in testing the notion that real love does not fade over time and true lovers can move past challenges in a healthy manner. In an ideal world, true love should be able to withstand any test that comes its way, even the one of time. It is resilient and grows deeper with time.
Love Quinn
Much like Joe, Love was a serial killer, and her victims included her family's au pair, who had sexually assaulted Love's twin brother Forty when they were children, Candace, Delilah, and Natalie, her neighbor who Joe was becoming obsessed with.
Overall, Love Quinn has directly murdered five people. These are: Sofia, Delilah, Candace, Natalie and her husband, James. However, she really should be held accountable for a sixth, with Gil.
Over a roast-chicken dinner, Love reveals to Joe that she did kill her first husband, but it was an accident — she overdosed him with this paralytic when really she just wanted to talk! Now she's got it all figured out: She paralyzes Joe by putting the poison on a knife handle (brilliant!).
Despite its unusual choice of protagonist – obsessive stalker and serial killer Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) – Netflix's You is entering its fourth season, with audiences around the world streaming the many crimes he commits in the name of “love”.
In episodes 6 and 7, Joe is unfaithful to Love and explores his connection with Marienne. His cheating feels worse this time around because he's a husband and father, and this storyline drives home the careless way that he treats the people in his life.
All 18 Of Joe Goldberg's Murders From "You" Ranked From Awful To Absolutely Horrifying.
At long last, Love has arrived, and Joe thanks God she's not alive. Love Quinn and Guinevere Beck return in You Season 4 Part 2, streaming on Netflix as of Thursday, March 9. And suffice it to say they're pissed off.
Her death took place off-screen, and Joe framed Dr. Nicky (Beck's therapist with whom she had an affair) for her murder. However, in episode 2 of season 2, Beck returned as a hallucination in Joe's mind. Severe bruising around her neck revealed that Joe choked her to death.
That's further complicated by Love's trajectory throughout the season. Seen mostly through Joe's first-person perspective as a lovable, if not a bit naïve, young woman longing for love after experiencing her own trauma, she is revealed to be suffering from severe PTSD.
Though Love seemed a perfect fit on paper, her death at the hands of Joe is vital to prove that in the end, Joe actually isn't looking for anyone. His grand declarations and notions of love are devoid of actual meaning because Joe's psychopathy makes him incapable of loving anyone properly.
Later, Love takes Candace's body to Anavrin where she presumably disposes of it.
The day to day affection just isn't there anymore
Watching TV together also meant snuggles (often ended up with sex on the couch!). But all of that is now gone. In fact, you go out of your way to avoid any contact with your partner at all. If still sharing a bed, you are careful to stay on your side.
The love you and others have for that person is eternal, the remembrances enough for a lifetime. And though they're no longer physically with you, in this sense, your loved one never really dies.
YES, love can last a lifetime and that does not mean you have to be together. To be honest, that feeling of true love will never go away completely. With time, you will learn to live with that pain, your heart will learn to live with it.
When Paco later goes to the bookstore and finds Beck attempting to escape the basement, begging Paco to find the key and insisting that Joe is crazy and dangerous, Paco runs away leaving Beck to be murdered by Joe. Paco and his mother Claudia moved away from New York to start fresh.
Series Information
Henry "Forty" Quinn-Goldberg is the newborn son of Love Quinn and Joe Goldberg. He is named after Love's brother, Forty Quinn. Joe is insistent on calling his son, "Henry". Whereas, Love and Dottie Quinn are more eager to call him "Forty".
Coming Clean to Kate
He decides to come clean to her about who he is and everything he has done. And now that Kate has inherited her father's empire, she has the power to either end Joe Goldberg or bring him out of hiding. She chooses the latter, and together they vow to keep each other good.