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Desperately, Ginny pleaded her case - and tried to paint “them” as being more interested in killing than living. ‘YOU MAY NOT LIKE ME, BUT YOU NEED ME’ | After June won the scuffle over the one axe in the shack in which she and her nemesis were holed up, she actually threw Ginny’s “Some dogs, ya gotta know when to put down” line back at her. “But I’m not going to,” because Ginny had delayed the evacuation, costing even more innocents their lives. June could amputate, right? “Yeah,” she admitted. (Who farted?!?) When they awakened, a walker got the best of Ginny and did more than kiss her hand. Once he was finally loaded on the rig, June and Ginny were to follow, but they were trapped back at Tank Town by a massive explosion. Over and over, he insisted that he didn’t know who “they” were, to the point where June defied Ginny and sedated him rather than allow him to continue to be tortured. (Am I the only one who forgot that Wes, who I actually love, was even on the show? It’s been a minute!)Īfter fighting off a walker with razorblades attached to her fingers - well, that’s new! - Ginny refused to let June treat Wes until she’d questioned the artist, whose bunk was lousy with spray-paint cans. ![]() As if it was going to be that easy! Ginny immediately eyeballed a tank with “The End Is the Beginning” painted on it and deduced that “somebody meant to do this.” So nobody was being “ambulanced” to safety until she got answers - not even Wes, who had a stomach full of shrapnel. They’d help, then they’d get the hell outta Dodge. Oh, great - and Ginny had shown up with Hill and Marcus, apparently her favorite Rangers. The newest well had blown, and if the winds shifted - heck, if anyone farted! - more could go up in flames. When the trio arrived, it was a disaster scene. There had been a terrible accident since Ginny ordered production tripled, Lucy explained. ‘SOME DOGS YA GOTTA KNOW WHEN TO PUT OUT TO PASTURE, JUNE’ | … they as well as Sarah were summoned to Tank Town. With that, the matter was as good as settled until… “You’d want this for them, wouldn’t ya?” he replied. What about all their friends? June sensibly asked. When June protested that she wanted to save people, he said, in that ultra-sincere way of his, “You could save me.” Though he wouldn’t tell her the full story of what had happened with Janis, he did float the idea that he wouldn’t last long if he stayed in Lawton. When she expressed her disappointment at not actually being able to help anyone, he suggested… um… ya know… “we could leave.” It was, he noted, just 100 miles from Paradise Ridge to his cabin, and he was still sorry that he hadn’t taken up Janis on her offer to bequeath him her and Cameron’s escape plan. Natch, June had already asked Ginny for one - and been turned down.Īfter John rendezvoused with June and Sarah, his wife rode with him toward their next stop: Paradise Ridge. (Hence, newcomer Malcolm’s death during surgery to remove his appendix and, if I’m not mistaken, the fastest transition ever.) What our heroines really needed was a hospital. But since they were stretched way too thin, they were always getting where they needed to go too late and finding themselves able to do too little. ![]() From there, we learned that since becoming Ginny’s “employees,” June and Sarah had transformed the latter’s rig into an unusually large ambulance. ![]() Rather than offer up any intel about the group that was spray-painting “The End Is the Beginning” everywhere, the woman committed suicide, setting the stage for the baddies to. ‘TURNS OUT SOME FROGS VOMIT UP THINGS THEY’D RATHER NOT EAT IN A MOST PECULIAR WAY’ | As “Bury Her Next to Jasper’s Leg” began, Virginia and her Rangers pursued and questioned a middle-aged runaway about a mysterious “them” that was (were?) of great concern.
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