In this chapter, the reader is introduced to a number of new characters, each of whom has a unique story to tell. The first of these characters is the narrator, who tells the reader that he is not planning on killing his brother's murderer, but that he does not care what the murderer thinks of killing other people. The narrator then asks the reader to imagine what it would be like to be the murderer of his own brother, and to imagine that he were planning to kill the murderer. He then imagines that he would have to choose between killing the murderer and reporting the crime to the authorities. He imagines what it must be like for the murderer to have the power to kill his own family, and he imagines how it must feel for the narrator to have to make the choice between killing his family or reporting the
In this chapter, the reader is introduced to a number of new characters, each of whom has a unique story to tell. The first of these characters is the narrator, who tells the reader that he is not planning on killing his brother's murderer, but that he does not care what the murderer thinks of killing other people. The narrator then asks the reader to imagine what it would be like to be the murderer of his own brother, and to imagine that he were planning to kill the murderer. He then imagines that he would have to choose between killing the murderer and reporting the crime to the authorities. He imagines what it must be like for the murderer to have the power to kill his own family, and he imagines how it must feel for the narrator to have to make the choice between killing his family or reporting the