"Killing innocents revenge" is the title of this chapter's first soliloquy, and it's the first time we've heard it in the novel. It's also the last time we hear it in this chapter, so we're not exactly sure what to make of it. The narrator tells us that he's not a human, and that he can't be a human because he was created by an evil being. He's a doll, after all, and he can do whatever he wants with the rest of the humans in the world. He promises to turn the narrator into a doll and reunite him with his daughter. He also promises to burn the dolls in the teacher's laboratory, which is where all the students from the "killer league" have been spending their time since the beginning of the year. He doesn't want to burn them, but he does want to make sure that they're safe. He says he'll forgive him for the crimes he committed this year, but that he won't let him go back to the moon hermits until he can prove that he wasn't the one who set them up. He tells the narrator to kill him now, for the hermits have died in vain. He thanks the narrator for helping him find the truth, and tells him that humans are boring. He asks the narrator if he can join the killer league, since he has so many questions, and because he'd like to experience the truth himself.
"Killing innocents revenge" is the title of this chapter's first soliloquy, and it's the first time we've heard it in the novel. It's also the last time we hear it in this chapter, so we're not exactly sure what to make of it. The narrator tells us that he's not a human, and that he can't be a human because he was created by an evil being. He's a doll, after all, and he can do whatever he wants with the rest of the humans in the world. He promises to turn the narrator into a doll and reunite him with his daughter. He also promises to burn the dolls in the teacher's laboratory, which is where all the students from the "killer league" have been spending their time since the beginning of the year. He doesn't want to burn them, but he does want to make sure that they're safe. He says he'll forgive him for the crimes he committed this year, but that he won't let him go back to the moon hermits until he can prove that he wasn't the one who set them up. He tells the narrator to kill him now, for the hermits have died in vain. He thanks the narrator for helping him find the truth, and tells him that humans are boring. He asks the narrator if he can join the killer league, since he has so many questions, and because he'd like to experience the truth himself.