Welcome to Forever Knight Episode discussion. We're starting at the beginning, and depending how it goes, we'll do one to two eps a week. You can last week's post for For I Have Sinned here. Next up will be Dying To Know You -- look for it next Tuesday.
Schanke: Nick, don't drop him. Think of the paperwork.
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Schanke: Nice tie, Captain. Did your son make it?
___________________
Stonetree: What's the matter? Is it a woman?
Nick: No.
Stonetree: Are you...constipated or something?
Last Act, Air Date: May. 1992
A young woman dies, and all evidence points to suicide. Nick, however, has a gut feeling that it was murder, but seems unable to prove it. Added to his stack of unsolved crimes, it makes Nick question his own feelings of self-worth, especially after hearing about another, real suicide: that of one of his "old friends". Nick must search through his memories of their relationship of centuries past to determine why she killed herself, and why he shouldn't. ~ recap and quotes via tv.com
Schanke: Nick, don't drop him. Think of the paperwork.
___________________
Schanke: Nice tie, Captain. Did your son make it?
___________________
Stonetree: What's the matter? Is it a woman?
Nick: No.
Stonetree: Are you...constipated or something?
no subject
Date: 2006-06-13 07:10 am (UTC)From:I think that if he'd become mortal again, Janette would have broken off contact with Nick, but for multiple reasons. First, so that LaCroix wouldn't harm Nick (or just bring him right back across)--and the only way to stop that would be for Nick to be completely severed from the vampire community, even losing all contact with those he was closest to. Second, because it would have been too painful for Janette to watch him age and die, and she has a lot of mental energy invested in the 'mortals die, we don't' philosophy. I don't think she'd see Nick as lesser, but it would hurt too much to know that the one who's always been there for you--even if you don't see him for 100 years or so at a time--is no longer going to be around.