Wine and Gun

Chapter 91

Stories like this often end tragically.

"I'm so glad you said that," Elliot said in his ear, his breath hot, his voice cracking, and a sticky sound of water squeezed between his fingers, "Just stay here and let me take care of you— —”

Herstal was stunned for a moment, and he suddenly realized a problem.

- Elliott's feelings for his victims are not just "love", the way he loves is very weird. Elliott was overjoyed when Hestal told him "I have only you"; he was overjoyed at the fact that he was eating food from his own hands, not to keep his captive alive Necessary action, he clearly enjoyed the whole process; he said, "Let me take care of you", right?

This is not an equal love relationship, even for paranoid people who believe they are in a relationship with a stranger.

- Apparently, the killer Qiáng Ni enjoys putting his victims in a vulnerable position and taking care of them with his own hands.

And Elliot let out a trembling moan in his ear, and she slammed into his lap.

It was a second of silence as the young man's fingers trembled and smeared the sticky liquid from his trousers, as if trying to make them cover more, like Hephaestus' futile pursuit of Athens Na.

His fingers swirled possessively around Herstal's legs, rubbing the liquid into the cloth until his prisoner could feel the wet cloth against his skin, while Herstal's thoughts has drifted into the distance.

- When Albarino went to dinner with him, he said to him: "When the pleasures of beauty are pursued, the irrational desire overcomes the judgment that leads to the right action... It is the passion called love. "

It is the strong passion called love.

Plato's Phaedrus, of course. But why did Albarino suddenly quote that sentence? He doesn't actually think that Albarino really defines this complex relationship between them as "love", and Albarino doesn't have the self-knowledge to talk about "love" while acknowledging his own psychological flaws— — they all know it doesn't make sense.

What's more, the love discussed in the Phaedrus is the love between an elder and a young man in ancient Greece, which is obviously very different from the modern definition of love. Unless that was a hint, a hint of something that Albarino knew was going to happen but Herstal himself didn't know.

Plato said in the Phaedrus: A lover likes someone who is weaker than himself.

All these imperfections of the beloved's soul must be a source of joy for the lover; and if these were not already innate qualities, he would cultivate them, for to do otherwise would be to deprive himself of the pleasure of the moment .

Killer Qiángni enjoys taking care of his victims very, very much. He likes that the other party is tied helplessly and can only be at his mercy; he likes that the other party takes food from his hands; he likes that the other party can't go anywhere and can only wait for him to return.

Elliot whispered in his ear, "I love you so much."

Herstal frowned, of course Elliot didn't see the cold emotions gradually accumulating in his eyes, it was the bloodthirsty killing intent from the Westland pianist.

—The only question is, what role did Albarino Bacchus play in the whole thing?

Note:

[1] The truth is rarely pure and never simple.

—Wilde, "The Importance of Being Earnest"

[2] Hephaestus once tried to pursue the virgin goddess Athena, and dripped jīng on Athena's leg. Angry Athena wiped off the jīng liquid with wool and threw it on the ground, so that Gaia, the goddess of the earth, gave birth to Erictonius.

Chapter 25 Rain Rain Go Away 04

The hand fell on his head, with strong fingers and rough fingertips; the dim and gloomy morning sun was leaking through the high windows of the church; above, just below the cross, and surrounded by the round rose window behind the cross in an inescapable radiance.

The stained glass pattern inlaid on the long window on the side of the church is a young man interpreting a dream for the Egyptian pharaoh, who predicted to the pharaoh the seven-year famine in Egypt - he is the son of Joseph, Jacob and Rachel, the twelve patriarchs of Israel one. His father Jacob loved him more than his sons, so he gave him a beautiful colorful coat, and Joseph was even envied by his brothers for it.

"My child," said the man, with a heavy aftertaste in his voice, "I love you more than sons."

—Then Herstal woke up suddenly.

The room was empty but him, and Elliott was not there. He was lying on the gray, uncomfortably uncomfortable mattress, feeling a tingling pain in his throat from his rapid breathing. His hands were still tied behind his back, and as his consciousness returned to the cage, a stabbing pain began to appear. It was no exaggeration to say that he could barely feel a part of his fingers.

Of course Herstal couldn't sleep well that night. Although he knew that Eliot couldn't kill him while he was sleeping, he still woke up many times. This caused him to be more dizzy than any other morning at this moment, accompanied by a hallucination of wanting to gān.

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