In this chapter, we learn that the song has brought "darkness" to the stage, and that the "van der drat" that blocked the shot has blocked the search for the answers to the song's questions. The narrator tells us that he's not leaving the audience alone, and he says he'll always be with the audience. He says that the darkness is calling him up, calling him to give up his search for answers, and to give all his life, his love, and his meaning to give to the audience, to the princess. He doesn't want to lose her, he says, because it's "not worth losing you" . He tells the audience to shut up, and then he tells them that "something seems strange" about the way the show is going, and "something's different" inside the princess . It's like a switch is flipped inside her, and she's no longer looking for "fair" love, but for "hell." The narrator says that "what's up" with this show is that the two of them don't "get it" , and now they'll get the "hell outta screwmy way." He tells them about the pain they've been forced to endure, and says that they're "tortured," and "forced" to do "vnthinkable" things, like killing their families. He compares them to slaves, and tells them to "take a look" at the "riot" that they have caused. The audience is frozen, and the audience is "so foolish" that the human who was supposed to kill them was actually ready to do so. The chapter ends with the narrator thanking the audience for bringing "light into my darkness," and he thanks them
In this chapter, we learn that the song has brought "darkness" to the stage, and that the "van der drat" that blocked the shot has blocked the search for the answers to the song's questions. The narrator tells us that he's not leaving the audience alone, and he says he'll always be with the audience. He says that the darkness is calling him up, calling him to give up his search for answers, and to give all his life, his love, and his meaning to give to the audience, to the princess. He doesn't want to lose her, he says, because it's "not worth losing you" . He tells the audience to shut up, and then he tells them that "something seems strange" about the way the show is going, and "something's different" inside the princess . It's like a switch is flipped inside her, and she's no longer looking for "fair" love, but for "hell." The narrator says that "what's up" with this show is that the two of them don't "get it" , and now they'll get the "hell outta screwmy way." He tells them about the pain they've been forced to endure, and says that they're "tortured," and "forced" to do "vnthinkable" things, like killing their families. He compares them to slaves, and tells them to "take a look" at the "riot" that they have caused. The audience is frozen, and the audience is "so foolish" that the human who was supposed to kill them was actually ready to do so. The chapter ends with the narrator thanking the audience for bringing "light into my darkness," and he thanks them