No killing is happening here! Ship Nick and Hank all you want!
And honestly? I kinda do too. Like I want Silverhardt to sort their stuff out but I’m a multishipper and Griffinhardt is definitely right there in my Top 3. Their relationship is so beautiful in so many ways.
So very much. They built such a big, complex, intricate world. I really hope this isn’t the last we see of it. Whether it lives on via spin-off, books, a comic series…I don’t really care. I just want more!
I…don’t know that it would make much sense or fit into the dozen episodes we have left, I mean that’s talking about a whole character being introduced and starting a relationship in like half a season, and Nick being jealous would seem…weird.
He’s always treated Trubel kind of like a younger sister, so his being jealous of her new love interest would kind of squick me out a little. And I mean, too, the guy has enough to deal with already without preoccupying himself with who Trubel dates.
Also, I personally have always read Trubel as queer so if a hot Grimm did show up, no reason it has to be a guy. 😉
I think you’re right, his conscience is going to come for him in a big way before this is all over with. But I’m sad about this whole arc, and a little pissed. I’m kind of hoping there will be some magical reason for all of this eventually, because otherwise it just looks like some really intense rivalry sprang up between Sean and Nick almost out of nowhere and that…makes no sense to me.
Like they’ve had their issues in the past and they’ve butted heads but they were in a really good place at the start of season five. Sean was actively protecting Nick and vice versa. So. I hope there’s a better explanation in the end than just “Sean got power-hungry” or even worse, “Sean was jealous about Adalind.”
Yes! I did see it and I’m still emotional about it. And can I just say this ask is so beautifully-stated. It’s exactly what I was seeing while watching them. There’s so much confusion and no time to process any of it, Juliette isn’t sure who she is at the moment or what she is, and Nick is a twisted-up ball of fear and uncertainty and adrenaline and worry and love.
Both of them have to be thinking “too much has happened, too much muddy water under that bridge, too much pain and blame on both sides. Not even worth thinking about, really.”
And yet they gravitate toward each other any time they’re both in a room. They are always aware of each other. They protect and help each other like it’s an inborn instinct. And all that love is just swimming under the surface whenever their eyes meet, along with a question they’re afraid to ask. Case in point: