What’s a crooked lawyer on suspension to do?
In our opener, we see Nacho taking meetings while Don Hector sips coffee at a table behind him.
In the background, Hector sneers: “Who works for who?”

Credit: Michele K. Short/AMC/Sony Pictures Television
Nacho gets the message.
He chases after his visitor and drags him screaming into the back for a prolonged, merciless beating.
It must have been quite the experience, because hours later, Nacho can’t quite keep focus.
He displays no emotion as he pulls the needle out.
Rebecca’s disgust is written all over her face.
“Chuck was right about you,” she says.
“He’s mentally ill. What’s your excuse?”
Perhaps he’s just too tired.)
Howard wants to celebrate the sentencenot as a victory, but a turning point.
The two men raise their glasses and toast to new beginnings.
Of course, it takes all of 15 seconds for Jimmy to figure out a loophole.
“We’ll have to Karloff this thing!”
says Lydia, whom we last saw dying slowly of ricin poisoning in theBreaking Badepisode “Felina.”
Gus replies, “It could work.”
That conversation is interrupted by a phone call; Tuco (remember him?
He clutches at his chest, fumbles for a bottle of pills, and drops one.
And finally, back at Jimmy’s place, the phone is ringing off the hook.
Jimmy is reluctant, embarrassed even, so it’s gotta be bad, right?
Oh, but it’s not bad.
It’s goodor rather, it’s all good, man.
And that man’s name?
Oh, come on.You know.
“Saul Goodman,” Kim says.
“Yeah,” Jimmy replies.
“It’s like, ’s’all good, man.'”
“That guy has a lot of energy.”
“Eh,” says Jimmy, “it’s just a name.”