Or maybe he turns himself in to save Kim from being prosecuted, and she visits him in prison while he runs grifts and scams behind bars.
Surprised at close to accurate this ended up being. Everything but the grifts, and that is something that could develop in time in prison since he's so revered by the inmates.
Pretty satisfying ending. It's interesting how his capture was the antithesis of Walt's journey to the end. Everything fell Walt's way in the final Bad shows, and nothing went right for Saul all the way to losing the diamonds while tearing open the phone in the dumpster only to be found by the police quite easily. The dumpster situation is a nod of him rummaging through the dumpsters at the retirement home seasons ago.
But Saul had to die. And he did. He wasn't born that way, and the full Saul Goodman character wasn't a terminal death sentence like Walt's cancer was. He became Jimmy again, sacrificing the rest of his life of freedom for a reconciliation with Kim. And their moment together in the visiting room was a poignant reminder of their days sharing a smoke in the parking garage at HHM. The cigarette burned in red in an otherwise black and white scene, a sign that he's got a sense of peace in the face of his life sentence.
In the end, one doesn't know if Howard's wife ended up suing Kim, or if Jimmy's confession might have saved her from that circus. We also don't know if Kim stays in Florida or moved back to New Mexico or relocated to Colorado. We just know she's not practicing law again, maybe just still volunteering at the free legal place in Florida. But Jimmy got his redemption from the only person that mattered to him, and I'm okay with that.
Very happy to see Michael McKean, Betsy Brandt, and Cranston in their final appearances. Cranston delivered a vicious comment to Saul in the basement with the "So you've always been like this" assessment. But it's shown obvious he wasn't always like that. We are reminded at how much he did for Chuck, a kind of a time travel in the episode with the HG Wells novel on the counter being a nice touch.
Great show, and a great compliment to Breaking Bad. It's a little sad to know this storyline is complete, but the cast and crew and Gilligan and Gould delivered a decade and a half of top notch TV viewing.