![]() Lizzie then runs off crying because Nick the walker has been killed. Later, the two girls are at the fences, where Carol comes to talk with them and tells the two that Ryan asked her to look after them, before telling Lizzie that she is weak. At first, Lizzie wants to make sure that Ryan doesn't reanimate, but Carol ends up doing it herself, while Mika tries to calm Lizzie down. ![]() She is later seen when Carol brings her and her sister, Mika, to speak with Ryan, their father, before he dies and he tells Lizzie to look after her sister, before passing away causing the two girls to be saddened by the loss. Lizzie is first seen running and shouting out of the prison, notifying others for help, as walkers have breached the cell block. Lizzie accompanied Mika, Patrick and the other children for storytime and Carol's lesson on knives and how to be safe with them. She also brings up the fact that she herself has witnessed the turning process of her mother. Lizzie then argues that people also kill people and they still have names. ![]() Lizzie is first seen in the prison courtyard, with other children, naming the walkers on the fence, when Carl Grimes and Patrick approach them and Carl says that they shouldn't name walkers because they are not people and because they kill people. Post-Apocalypse Season 4 " 30 Days Without An Accident" She joined the community at the West Georgia Correctional Facility with her family sometime between the Season 3 finale and the Season 4 premiere. Very little is known about Lizzie's life prior to or as the outbreak began, except that she has a father, Ryan, and a sister, Mika, and lived in Jacksonville, Florida. In another case, Lizzie appeared to consider suffocating Judith Grimes to stop her from crying and appeared to be in an almost trance-like state as she did it, not reacting at all to her sister's cries for help from directly behind her. She showed no remorse or insight in killing Mika or the near killing of Judith. In the end, Lizzie was a very disturbed girl, suffering from severe psychological problems. This was also a case where she had attempted to help by leading the reanimated Henry away, but seemed stunned that he had tried to hurt her as she thought he was listening to her. ![]() (She leans strongly towards the latter policy after her father's death and the downfall of the Prison.) In " Internment," Lizzie appeared to be fascinated with a pool of congealed blood for some reason. Interestingly, she seems to "flip-flop" her position on walkers sometimes she recognizes that they're dangerous and attempts to keep herself and others away from them without hurting them, and other times she sees them as friends at best, harmless presences at worst. Lizzie most likely is mentally ill in some capacity, as evidenced by the fact that Carol is aware of her coping mechanism (looking at the flowers when she's feeling upset). She shares an eerie connection with them, naming them, describing them as her "friends," and saying that she can "hear them" talking to her. Lizzie's most notable quality is her obsession with the 'walkers' she sees them as being "just different," and thus not a threat to humans. While Lizzie can also be seen exhibiting normal childlike happiness and playfulness, these moments quickly give way to her character's increasingly dark turn throughout the fourth season. She is often pessimistic, frequently assuming absent people (such as Daryl Dixon and Sasha Williams) to be dead. Though she tries her hardest to be polite and altruistic, Lizzie nonetheless is prone to acts such as lashing out at people and torturing animals. Lizzie is seen to be a disturbed young girl, unable to completely come to terms with the world around her. ![]()
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