The following article contains major spoilers for Better Call Saul's series finale, "Saul Gone," which aired Monday on AMC.

Better Call Saul stars Bob Odenkirk and Rhea Seehorn have revealed what they think the future holds for their characters following the events of the Breaking Bad spinoff's bittersweet finale.

The heart of the prequel portion of Better Call Saul was the relationship between Kim Wexler (Seehorn) and Jimmy McGill (Odenkirk), the latter of whom would eventually come to be known as Saul Goodman. By the events of Breaking Bad, that relationship was virtually non-existent, with the two having divorced and gone down very different paths. Following the characters' post-Breaking Bad reunion in the Better Call Saul finale, however, Odenkirk and Seehorn seem to agree that Jimmy and Kim will continue to be part of each other's lives -- even with Jimmy behind bars.

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During an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Odenkirk was asked how he thinks Jimmy's story continues after the credits roll, as well as if he thinks Kim would continue to visit him in prison. "I think she comes to see him! I think she comes to see him once a year -- every other year at the least," he replied. "And I think he helps a bunch of guys in prison to get out who are innocent, or he helps shorten their sentences. He gets treated really well. And I don't think he gets out early...-ish. I don't think he gets out. I don't know what kind of dispensation they have for an 80-year-old, but I believe they have some, once you get to be that age where you can do something else.

"But I think he's kind of the king of the prison because he's a really, really good lawyer and a great lawyer for the kind of people in there," Odenkirk continued. "And he puts that to good use, probably even does some good work, like, genuinely good work. And then I think they see each other and I think he thinks she should stay married to that guy and have a life. I don't know what she does, though. She doesn't seem very happy at the water place."

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Seehorn largely echoed this sentiment in her own interview with EW. "I think [Kim's] going to go through a very complicated process of trying to figure out if she can help decrease his sentence in a way that is still just," she said. "And I don't think that's the last time they'll see each other. Not by a long shot. But that's me. I think there's other people that will think, 'That's the last day, that's it.' But I don't."

Seehorn also believes that, despite everything, Kim still has love for Jimmy. "Bob would have to give his side of it. I personally think she still loves him," she said. "Reconciling that with the actions that she must at least be aware of indirectly by reading newspaper articles of what Walter White was involved with and that he was considered aiding and abetting these people -- I don't know what she does with that. Does that make it impossible to romantically be in love with the person? Those are larger questions that will take years for her to unravel, but I definitely think that she loves him. And I don't just mean as a friend. I think that she still deeply loves him."

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Better Call Saul Has Reached Its Conclusion

In the series finale of Better Call Saul, Jimmy/Saul -- who had gone into hiding in Nebraska under the alias Gene Takovic following the events of Breaking Bad -- is finally apprehended by authorities for the role he played in Walter White's (Bryan Cranston) drug empire. Jimmy is facing a life sentence, plus 190 years. Being the skilled lawyer he is, though, he manages to negotiate a plea bargain that would only see him serve seven years in prison.

Jimmy attempts to sweeten the deal by disclosing previously unknown information regarding the death of Howard Hamlin (Patrick Fabian). However, he learns that a guilt-stricken Kim had already come clean about their involvement in Howard's downfall -- and while she is not facing any criminal charges, she runs the risk of being sued into oblivion by Howard's widow. In turn, Jimmy goes back on the plea bargain and confesses to his many crimes under oath, seemingly renouncing the Saul Goodman identity in the process. When all is said and done, Jimmy is sentenced to 86 years in prison, with Kim showing up to visit him in the show's final minutes.

Source: Entertainment Weekly