I figure Lucy felt guilty about letting her sister be erased by a change in history, so she felt the need to keep history on track as much as possible, no matter what. Which is the sort of thing that could put her at odds with Wyatt, given his intention to alter history.
I'd agree. It's a combination of feeling guilty about her sister plus her general desire to keep history in tact that worked together to drive her in this direction. Interestingly, for this specific case,. both Lucy and Wyatt agreed to double-cross Bass.
This might go to the point that Wyatt was mentioning near the end. In Westerns, characters are either a white hat or a black hat. Good or bad with no shades of grey. The real world isn't like that. In this case, you'd generally say that killing a wounded, unarmed, surrendering criminal would be wrong. However, maybe, just maybe, this is a grey area where you can make the case that shooting Jesse is the safest for history.
But yeah, they either need to switch her up constantly, or drop some lines about her buffing up on the New history between each trip. Or have an encyclopedia they can download to a laptop in the lifeboat after each trip, so she's always got the latest and greatest. Probably also useful to save all the iterations so they can compare them all some day at the end of the journey; see how bad they screwed up the timeline(s).
Given the reality of this being a TV series, they won't have a new history every week. And, that would actually present some problems in-universe in terms of having access to historians that are up to speed on the project. However, I like the idea of brushing up on the latest version of history. Hopefully, they address this at some point.
As I've pointed out several times before, it's actually quite common in time-travel shows (e.g. this, Legends of Tomorrow, 12 Monkeys, Travelers, Continuum, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, etc.) to posit that history resists major change, that the cumulative pressure of historical events and processes tends to produce the same overall outcomes even when small-scale or local events are changed. After all, you can't sustain an ongoing series if the heroes -- or villains -- can too easily achieve their goal. So change has to be possible, but difficult. That's typical of the genre, and it's clearly the case on this show.
I think we have collectively acknowledged this necessity. However, sometimes it seems so artificial that it sometimes takes me right out of the story. The real world with all of its interactions is the ultimate chaotic, nonlinear system. Think of the butterfly effect. Small changes in the past can have huge, unpredictable ramifications in the present.
Who thinks that Wyatt can save his wife? I've been pondering this and think there's a surprise in the works.
I think there are three general scenarios. There's obviously the possibility that he can't save his wife and things stay the same. But, I think there are two general scenarios where he does safe his wife. He saves her and they are still a couple in the present or he saves her and they are not a couple in the present.
Before, I was thinking that the show would make it so he didn't save her to avoid the paradoxes that they don't want to address. However, if Wyatt saves his wife but then they get divorced around the time that she would've been murdered, everything else plays out mostly the same. Wyatt's ex-wife is alive and he lives out his life mostly the same as he did when she died. Perhaps an ongoing storyline will be his attempts to win her back? Remember that part of the reason she was murdered was because they were having an argument and she got out of the car. Perhaps whatever they were arguing about eventually led to the divorce.
I almost suspect that the outcome will be some sort of twist like this. I guess we'll see next week!
Mr Awe