"The Revenge of Leah" opens with the narrator thanking Leah for everything she has done for him. Leah tells the narrator that she was possessed by the monster, and that she has been shut out of the monster's world by the other humans who have been using the monster to control their bodies. She says that she heard a voice saying "abimbomina ble" and "painful" , which reminds her of her mother's murderer. She thinks that the voice must have been coming from another part of the mountain, and she wonders why Leah doesn't kill the devil himself. The narrator tells Leah that the townspeople worship the monster as a god, and Leah can't live in a place like Leah's, where the people worship a god. He tells her that she offered her daughter to the monster and is trying to blame the monster for her actions. She tells him that the monster did not force her to do anything, but that she went to save her daughter. She asks Leah not to leave, because the townspeople might kill her if she stays.
"The Revenge of Leah" opens with the narrator thanking Leah for everything she has done for him. Leah tells the narrator that she was possessed by the monster, and that she has been shut out of the monster's world by the other humans who have been using the monster to control their bodies. She says that she heard a voice saying "abimbomina ble" and "painful" , which reminds her of her mother's murderer. She thinks that the voice must have been coming from another part of the mountain, and she wonders why Leah doesn't kill the devil himself. The narrator tells Leah that the townspeople worship the monster as a god, and Leah can't live in a place like Leah's, where the people worship a god. He tells her that she offered her daughter to the monster and is trying to blame the monster for her actions. She tells him that the monster did not force her to do anything, but that she went to save her daughter. She asks Leah not to leave, because the townspeople might kill her if she stays.