I love Kevin don't get me wrong, I completely understand he had every right to leave and save himself. But I keep rereading the part where he calls Jean asking if Edgar Allan has really changed districts and it breaks my heart.
Was this the first time they "talked" after Kevin left? How did Jean feel hearing his voice again? Was that the moment Jean found out Kevin Could have called him and just didn't?
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So, even though I don't agree with Albus' ideas and decisions most of the time.
I don't think I have ever agreed with anyone about anything more...
I mean-
Like... I understand you, Albus.
I totally do.
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being at the bus stop to go to work and seeing my black spot of a baby on the windowsill breaks my heart😭
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I need a boyfriend. One who actually sees me as a boy. Where are they. 😭🙏
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"I'll be quiet, Doctor. Tell them to take off the strait-waistcoat. I have had a terrible dream, and it has left me so weak that I cannot move. What's wrong with my face? it feels all swollen, and it smarts dreadfully."
This is the first thing that Renfield says after being found lying on the floor, almost dead, and paralysed. After trying to stop Dracula from attacking Mina, almost getting killed that the swollen injuries of his face are the least worrisome of his injuries.
This poor man has been living a mundane, and lonely nightmare before anything began. One started by society, then continued by the people who society deems trustworthy enough to hide the mentally ill. Who cares what happens to a mad old man as long as he is not disrupting the every day with his suffering.
How only Quincey, and Arthur express a single thought of worry towards Renfield, while Van Helsing and Jack procede with a cold procedure to let him say his last words.
"There is no time to lose. His words may be worth many lives"
Why now? Why do you all put weight on Renfield's words now. Why his words are valuable when he is shaking his hands with death? Why does the madman receives mercy, and care when it's certain that he will die?
"It is no common enemy that we deal with. Alas! alas! that that dear Madam Mina should suffer!"
Renfield was the only one to warn Mina, to tell her that she needed to get out of there, to understand too late the great danger that he put himself, and this lady old enough to be his daughter into.
He was used as an experiment, as a fool, as a servant, and at last he could have a single kind conversation before confronting the monster who manipulated him for freedom.
And now the old man is dead.
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