Spoilers ahead.
Of
 all the characters I speculated might meet their demise in these final 
episodes of "Mad Men," I never considered Betty - at least not without a
 time jump a few decades into the future.  Betty always seemed 
invincible and unchangeable, even when she temporarily lost her looks.  
She was surely meant to stay emotionally stunted, and keep damaging her 
children and deluding herself to the bitter end.  Except she didn't.
Sometime
 in the past season or so, after Bobby's field trip, but before sending 
Glen off to Vietnam, Betty developed some empathy.  She long ago grew a 
backbone - last night Betty expressed exactly what she wanted, took 
charge of a terrible situation, and refused to compromise her wishes.  
However, it's only been very recently that she's stopped lashing out, 
and has shown signs of more maturity.  And though the supportive words 
for Sally were late, maybe they didn't come too late to mend fences.  I 
feel a bit cheated that we didn't get to see more of Betty's 
transformation over time.  
Stepping back to look 
at the big picture of Betty's character arc, is this a satisfying 
conclusion for such a difficult and polarizing character?  A fatal 
illness seems like such an old-fashioned, melodramatic device, 
compounded by the irony of the Lucky Strikes probably having contributed
 to the development of her lung cancer.  But as a catalyst for Betty's 
seizing her final opportunity to direct the course of her own life, it 
worked for me.  At first I thought she was being portrayed as too much 
of a saint in this episode, but upon reflection, she's not.  Her 
instructions to Sally are still all about maintaining her facade.  Her 
decision not to fight the cancer can be seen as a very selfish one, 
especially considering the impact on Henry and the boys.  Is she being a
 realist about the situation, or is this her final act of stubborn 
self-indulgence?  In either case, what matters is that she commits to 
the decision and has made peace with her fate, as she tells Sally firmly
 that she's not "a quitter."
Fate and luck are the
 prime movers in this episode.  Betty is struck down by misfortune, but 
Pete gets an extraordinary windfall, engineered by the wild machinations
 of Duck Phillips.  Oh Duck, it was good to see you again.  As with 
Betty leaving on a sad note, I never imagined Pete would come through 
"Mad Men" with such a happy ending.  Even last week, as I noted that a 
reconciliation with Trudy looked possible, I didn't suspect that we'd 
actually see them get back together, or Pete going so far as to sweep 
her off her feet with the most unapologetically romantic declaration 
we've ever seen from anyone on this show.  And I don't begrudge him a 
second of it, because Pete stopped being a resentful, malevolent little 
brat at some point.  He learned from his many, many mistakes.  
He's still far from perfect, of course, but like Betty he finally 
figured out what he wanted and went to bat for it.  Chekhov's Rifle is 
nowhere in sight.   
And Don?  Still looking for 
his future, and stumbling through his past.  His storyline with the 
broken down car (more bad luck), the motel, and the veterans was a bit 
of a slog this week.  He's essentially forced to take a detour into his 
past, and while it's fun to see Don squirm in discomfort, and bits of 
the bygone midwestern small town milieu, a lot of the developments 
really felt forced.  There were surely other ways to get Don to interact
 with Andy and swap war stories that didn't require getting stuck in 
Oklahoma.  Next to Pete and Betty, Don's storyline this week felt 
positively sluggish.    
Well, until the end 
anyway, when he sheds another piece of mental baggage and 
another significant tie to his life in New York, which is rapidly 
becoming part of his past.  At this rate Don Draper will be gone by the 
end of next week, and Dick Whitman will be somebody else, just as Betty 
and Pete have become other people.  And Sally too, before I forget.  
Betty more or less just handed her adulthood with those final 
instructions.  Would the news of Betty's impending end be enough to get 
Don to go back to New York?  If he does, will he still be Don when he 
gets there?
Three former SC&P partners down.  Who will be left at McCann after next week?
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