Spoilers, obv.

I’m aware that this is either going to be a relatively short one or an epic one. The risk of the latter is that rather than just talking about the issue, for the first time I’m free to talk about the series as a whole, and so talk about some of those other choices. There’ll be some of that, but it would warp the nature of the notes, and give some false perspective. I can talk about it being over now, sure, but talking about it all means I’m not talking about this element. Not least because I can’t talk about it all – there’s still the question of issue 45.

But still. There’s a lot to talk about, and a lot of hard things in here to do. We knew where we going, but the devil is in the details. The devil’s everywhere.

Jamie/Matt’s Cover

Minerva finally gets her head-shot. I was a little worried that people would realise exactly what was happening to Minerva here, but I didn’t see anyone realise she’s falling, and speculate why. Of course, I knew what it was and couldn’t not see it. That’s how it works.

It’s a striking last image though – this is an especially blank glance, in the middle of all the motion. Matt’s pink/white nimbus is really powerful too.

Emma Rios/Miquel Muerto

Emma’s one of our favourite artists, and we were so glad that we managed to get her before the end. Emma’s always someone who gets this evocative drama of it all – this is obviously a momentous cover, but you don’t know the moment until reading. Laura and Lucifer being a core relationship, and the hint of leaving. Miquel does strong, atmospheric things with the colours as well. It’s a great cover to end the story on. On - Pretty Deadly is back on the same day as 45, and I can’t wait. Gets!

IFC

In terms of minor things we did which have a big emotional effect, changing the gods’ names to their human names was certainly one. It sits there and stings.

Page 1

This issue is particularly tightly wound, so we set the clock on the issue in this one page.

I had a couple of people wonder where the cops came from. I presume it’s because the delay in publication – the “we have to go now because of woden’s tape has revealed we’re almost all complicit” is the only reason why they went for Minerva immediately.

For a page that’s so tightly wound, Jamie does some great establishing here. Opening panel with the fire in top of Valhalla, to link to last issue. A shot with all these people in it – a character beat, and three extremely dialogue low panels.

Page 2

Riff on Better The Devil You Know.

The weird rhythm in WicDiv is the arcs-which-take-place-in-a-very-short-time and arcs-which-take-place-over-months. Faust act, Rising Action, Imperial Phase II, “Okay” are the over-a-short time. Fandemonium, Commercial Suicide, Imperial Phase I and Mothering Invention are the extended ones. The closest to one which does both is Faust Act, which spreads its action over a week or two.

Page 3

Lovely stuff in here with Jamie, in terms of character work – obviously this is Lucifer hamming it up, but seeing individual responses around the room is a hell of a thing. Minerva’s a total mess here.

Valentine giving up clever insults at this point is probably a thing.

Page 4-5

“Bothersome” is a very Lucifer word. The expression in panel 2 is also key Lucifer – that eye-roll of it.

Laura’s captions also arrive mid way through – key, as they’re clearly going to be key. I was thinking of having them at the start of page 3 as well, but we can let us live in the moment.

Laura’s performance tentacles is a lovely panel – seeing how Matt works the colours on the space. The blues fading to white, the reds. Honestly, this is making me miss working with Matt already, and seeing how good he and Jamie are together.

Callbacks here to Lucifer in the first arc – the cycle of it all.

“There were two girls in hell” makes me well up. |It’s one of my favourite Jamie expressions in the issue.

Page 6-7

When planning the larger structure of WicDiv, I was aware that I made certain calls in hope I would be able to save people. The early “death” of the Heads was actually a way to protect them. I was aware that characters who were in play were far more likely to die, as they had more chances to do so. I knew I could likely save the heads, so by making them heads, I made it more likely.

I originally planned for Dionysus to die, but I couldn’t bear it. His hubris was real, but the idea that someone could give so much without anyone really caring or doing something for him was too heart breaking, even for me. I realised during Rising Action that I could actually save him – the pieces were already in play, and I just had to lean into those relationships to lead to Baph’s choices. At the start, I wasn’t sure where Baphomet ended in year 4 – part of me thought he’d survive, as I didn’t have that final beat for him at the start. That I didn’t have a hard end for Baphomet always made him open to the story finding another purpose for him – which is an end which I can’t imagine any other way now. WicDiv is an awful necessary machine.

That applied to Lucifer too. She was a darling, obviously, but she was always going to be trouble. Part of me was aware that she could come back and almost immediately get killed again. I’d like her to make it out, but it was possible she wouldn’t.

So, as I said last time, when I realised she was the final opposition I was pleased – that was perfect to the themes and the structure.

I wrote in my synopsis that Laura uses a performance to touch Lucifer and convince her into renouncing her godhood, and left it at that.

There it sat until I came to script it.

Because, in all honesty, I had no idea how Laura was going to convince Lucifer to give up her godhood. I just trusted that there would be some way Laura could reach her. Or, really, I hoped there was – because I knew if I wrote something that didn’t feel convincing to me, I wouldn’t do the scene. Lucifer would have died instead.

So, the day came when I was scripting this sequence, and I started writing, and wondered what the performance would be, and I just wrote “Laura descends the Ananke head sequence and drags Luci back.”

Then I leaned back, a little shocked, because that was clearly right, and so clearly fit with what the series does – a final deconstruction of one of our core visual icons, giving a new way to look at the sequence and think about it. It was just there. As if it was there all along. Or just the sort of thought that emerges when you’ve been obsessed over this fucking thing for five years.

I’m aware of the weird resonance as well – Laura’s finding a performance to save a friend is me finding a performance to save a character. WicDiv was a weird book.

Jamie and Matt go to town, of course – the melting faces are just painful, and wonderfully done. The fleshy reds, the fires. How Clayton uses the captions across the page to play with pacing…

I originally suggested we do it completely as the WicDiv spread, with Laura crawling across the centre spread and making her way up – that it would be treating what is meant to be two columns as a space was decided to be too much, so instead we went with flipping to a subjective perspective on a space that we’ve only experienced from a single objective outside viewpoint. That’s got magic too.

Page 8

A long time to get to this kiss, right?

We moved the dialogue around a little to nail some moments – we had the magic effect on the final panel so the transition to the next page wasn’t too much.

The annoyance of Eleanor in the last panel is just my everything. I described it to Jamie by using a metaphor of me in my early thirties, having split up with an Ex, and torn between various places, including seriously wondering whether, after everything, the simple answer to my sexuality stuff was that I was just gay. How annoyed I would have been, after all those years, if it was that. Just a “Oh, FFS. I’m just gay! Why didn’t I get that earlier? Why have I wasted all this time? What a fucking fool I am.”

That.

Page 9

Repeat of core WicDivian imagery, turned to a different purpose. After these magificent godly reveals, we do this very normal world.

Yeah. This would have been a happy place to end the series.

Page 10

Laura wants to be better, of course. It’s easy to say you want to do better.

A+ Cassandra-ing in the background there.

Page 11

Now, Minerva is dead in a few pages time, and she is a genuine monster, trapped in a system of her own making. But I didn’t want to send her into the void thinking she had that horror awaiting her. I can’t forgive her, but I can give her a little peace.

Title drop, of course, with a wonderful expression by Jamie. There’s a lot here.

Okay, let’s do this.

“Okay” is a phrase that’s haunted WicDiv. We’ve come back to it multiple times – it’s a fascinating word in the English language, and has caused problems for people translating it, in the mixture of ambivalence and optimism in it is really tricky. Clearly, we use everything inside the word.

It wasn’t my Dad’s last words, but it’s the last exchange I remember with him. Everyone else was out, and I was helping him back to his seat. He says to me.

“Son, I know this is strange, but I can’t help but think it’s going to be okay.”

And I can almost imagine my eyes bulging out of my head, as I wanted to howl at him: no, Dad. It really fucking isn’t.

This comes up almost verbatim in the first arc, with the exchange between Laura and Lucifer before she breaks out. The series is about many things, but my Father’s death was the core inspiration for it, and that “It’s going to be okay” haunted me and it.

I don’t think this is what my Dad meant, clearly, but it’s how I’ve ended up metabolising it. I’ve been signing “It’s going to be okay” when I sign Faust Acts, partially as it’s the WicDiv phrase, partially as a secret-promise-that-they-won’t-all-die-and-there-is-hope and partially because “When death comes, it’s okay” is that buried in it. If I had to boil the book down to a sentence, it’d be it. It means different things depending how you look at it. That’s all I’ve got.

Page 12

I talk about Solving The Equation of the third year, and Dio being in play for this section is absolutely part of it.

That first panel. I said that the cast were all people I’d have killed to be at various stages of my life. Umar is someone I try to be now. I don’t succeed, but he’s a worthy goal. Kind is not soft and all that.

While the silent panel is something you’ve all seen before, it’s worth highlighting how good Jamie is. The favourite gesture of the scene is the eyes upwards of Cassandra – I don’t remember Jamie using this angle before, and it’s really striking. I suddenly miss that I won’t be working with Jamie again for a while. Have fun, Jamie. You were the best.

And now, this.

Page 13-14-15

“It would take a real monster to kill a kid” is one of those lines that have been sitting in the files since the beginning.

There was a fan artist in the WicDiv community early on who kept on doing these totally charming portraits of Baal and Minerva playing around in a big brother and little sister way. Every time I saw them, I felt both love for the art, and a sadness. “In four years time, you are going to have a terrible day.”

That’s one of the weirdest things of the last four years – that. Knowing that stuff is out there.

Looking at this at a little distance, I see the elements in – the standing on the edge, the “Please Don’t” and all that. I sigh. This is awful and upsetting and that page turn is one of the hardest in the series. I wish Valentine would forgive himself, but he couldn’t.

This is the sort of thing I want to write a lot about, and want to write nothing. I think I’ll keep it as just the facts, in terms of trying to plot this.

Occasionally you get to a knot – I knew Valentine had to kill Minerva, that Valentine couldn’t bear to live after that was done and that Minerva had to die after Baal gave up his powers. How to you put those three together, without introducing something else.

C asked “Where does it happen? Could it happen somewhere high?” and the rest was there. Falling being the repeating WicDiv image as well.

I think I pictures this actually side on, without the drop. Jamie’s choice is better, just because of the eyes.

The three panels is something we’re returned too, but choosing the distance was key. You know it’s there, but I didn’t want to revel in the dead bodies. This is a different kind of death to many of the ones in the book, and has to be treated as such. Any more blood than shows they’re dead would be obscene.

I sigh again. I note that Matt does the lights on the guns perfectly, but I want to highlight craft. The shot of eveyrone waiting is a huge thing – Inanna’s grief, Dio stepping in, and the crossed arms of Cassandra…

16



I think it was when I was plotting the second year at WicDiv that I realised that I couldn’t see a way out of this which didn’t involve the majority of the cast ending up in jail for a while. I was okay with that, as it made some sense. It’s thematically resonant for a few ways – it’s a choice which shows their acceptance of their acts, and their actual humanity as well as an understanding of their power, and lots more.

However, due to all the straight, white characters being dead, it does mean that a all-queer all-PoC-minus-Lucifer cast going to jail, in the current jail system. That said, while far from perfect, the UK is not the US. I don’t think I could have written this ending in the US. Even in the UK, I safety-proof it conceptually as much as I can.

They are all queer, and almost all PoC… but they are also superhumans (and mostly rich.) They have a degree of power, and options which are not open to other people… and it is their one chance to try and navigate this space with no-one else (either them or other humans) getting killed. It’s their last chance to act in good faith to the rest of the species.

I wouldn’t trust the system if they were people without their resources. They’re not. And this is the least-worst choice I can see.

I’m sure some of you will disagree with me on that.

17

More safety-proofing – Voluntuaryism is an anarchist idea. “The only true order is voluntary order” basically.

18-19-20

This is a lot of space for a sequence which is relatively minor dramatic weight, but as we segue towards the end, we want it to breathe a little. Plus there’s the matter of the page turns – the previous interstitial was about pushing that as well, so both the “surrender” and Laura’s final headshot are on a turn.

Matt’s lighting in this sequence is wonderful – I said to Jamie that I was thinking of almost suggesting we’re changing genre before Laura steps in. It’s a “The special forces go after Batman” sort of sequence. I was thinking of the one from Batman: Year Zero, which is some top class special forces entering darkened environments.

Another moment of the weird-colouring-in-a-balloon, and the actually living in the moment.

Taking the guns is more safety-proofing, showing they are not acting in blind faith of the system. That Laura can take the guns also shows that Laura likely could walk out of prison any time she wants, and the rest will be able to do the same too.

(Not that the people in power know they don’t presently have access to their big ones, of course.)

We originally has Cass shouting that final line, but had it much more matter of fact. This is kind of past shouting.

21-22

Yeah, this is calling back all manner of stuff. Back to the courtroom.

Jamie asked me a lot about the final expression, as is only right. This is a story where we’ve used head shots a lot, normally with pose. This is something else.

23

Worth noting that Laura couldn’t be sentenced to life imprisonment. She’s 18 so would be sentenced for “custody for life”. Not that the story actually says what she’s been sentenced to that either – we cut before the sentence is given. Don’t expect a firm answer to that in next issue either.

But they all have been sentenced to life, in the obvious metaphorical way. Laura has been depressed and self-destructive to the point of a death wish throughout. At the end, she’s decided to try to live.

I count that as bitter sweet, and I count that as a win. I’m proud of her. I’m proud of them all.

I’m in tears now.

24-28

And we were when compiling the letters page. Thanks you lot.

29

Jamie and I both had really intense feelings about the final cover. It’s clear why we’ve kept it secret (it gives away Laura survives) but to see this young woman we’ve been writing about older was incredibly moving.

Laura was 20 years younger than me at the start of WicDiv, and she’s 20 years older than me at the end. Feeling suspended between the two poles, identically. The duality of it, one more time.

I love this cover so much, and I loved these characters, this book, you lot.

Thanks for reading.