Throughout Season 2, as Maggie desperately tries to let go of her pain for Hershel’s sake (Logan Kim), Negan continues to show signs that the “old Negan” still lingers. Though he's undoubtedly a changed man, a particular scene in the Season 2 finale, Episode 8 titled “If History Were a Conflagration,” conjured up horrifying old memories while also delighting fans.
Negan's Nursery Rhyming Is Back
Following the big fight between Negan, the Burazi, and Bruegel (Kim Coates) in the Season 2 finale and his followers, a massive fire breaks out in the church, intentionally set by Negan and the Burazi. Bruegel manages to escape to the basement, where Negan follows him, Perlie (Gaius Charles) not far behind.
Negan and Bruegel come face to face, but Negan also has others from the Burazi behind him. Bruegel knows he is in trouble. There’s no way out. He begs Negan for mercy as Perlie arrives at the worst possible time. Bruegel tries to pin the blame on Perlie, indicating that he was working with Perlie and New Babylon Federation all along, and it’s all Perlie’s fault that this happened.
He holds out his bat, which fans have aptly named Lucille 2.0, and points it back and forth at their heads. “Eeenie, meenie, miney, mo,” Negan says as he tries to leave the decision about who should be the victim in the hands of fate (and children’s songs). He continues to the end of the nursery rhyme, stopping on Perlie. He hoists the bat over his head, about to bring it crashing down on Perlie’s head. But before he follows through, Negan stops himself.
Negan takes a gas tube and shoves it into Bruegel’s mouth, then lights his mouth on fire, burning Bruegel slowly but painfully from the inside out. Once Bruegel is dead, Negan thrusts the bat into the air and down onto the former foe’s head anyway, exactly as he had done to Abraham (Michael Cudlitz) and Glenn in The Walking Dead.
The scene is almost as horrifying as that game-changing scene in The Walking Dead that saw so many fans abandon the show. But it’s not nearly as impactful. This time, Negan is killing someone fans view as a clear “bad guy,” not a hero. He was a character we only barely got to know. However, the brutality of the scene is amplified from an emotional standpoint for another very significant reason.
The Scene Is Even Worse With One More Detail
There’s one small but crucial detail about this scene that makes it especially disturbing, even if fans predicted the victim would die by the end of the season. Unbeknownst to Negan, Maggie has secretly returned to fulfill her promise to Hershel, and she witnesses the whole thing.
Perlie manages to escape, but Negan charges after him. But right before he’s able to deliver a devastating blow to Perlie like he did to Abraham and Glenn so many years ago, Maggie runs up behind and stabs Negan in the back. It appears that this is the long-awaited end for the villain, but that isn’t the case.
What happens next suggests a very different Negan and may be the one moment that convinces Maggie that the showmanship of it all, the evil part of Negan that seemingly took pleasure in killing in such a brutal way, is not the most important part of him anymore. It might only ever have been a convincing façade.
In Ginny's Death, They Might Find Peace
Both of them were so concerned about protecting their interests, protecting themselves, and eliminating enemies that they forgot about Ginny. And sadly, it’s too late. She has perished, and she has turned. For the first time since the flashback scenes of Negan and his wife, the real Lucille (Hilarie Burton), Negan is showing genuine, unadulterated emotion and grief.
Maggie watches in disbelief as he weeps, calling Ginny’s name, over and over. She recognizes that Negan had genuine feelings of love for this young girl, whom he took in as if she were his own daughter. Despite Ginny wanting to kill Negan for having killed her father, he felt a desperate need to protect her, and now has a tremendous weight of guilt for not succeeding.
Recognizing the first time she’s seeing genuine feelings from Negan, Maggie slowly hands him her knife so that he can put an end to Ginny’s suffering. As he continues to sob, Maggie sees Negan, arguably for the first time, as a real human with feelings, emotions, and the capacity for love.
Sadly, the realization had to come from such an emotional moment, and after such a devastating scene where Maggie likely felt like she was reliving the moment her husband was brutally killed all over again. But it makes for an interesting full circle to the story.
With Maggie now recognizing this, she may come to terms with the reality that killing Negan won’t bring Glenn back. And now, she knows it won’t get her son back either. Negan is better to Maggie as an ally than he is as an enemy, or even dead. Little pig, little pig, Maggie might finally be ready to let Negan in. Stream The Walking Dead: Dead City on AMC+.