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... g was inherently wrong with him.
No, not inherently. He knew himself clearly than any other. He was not like this. Like any other human, he knew the consenquences of killing. Then if he eliminated all improbable answers, the only remaining suspicioun was:
He had changed. Something was changed within him. He could even go as far, someone had changed him, but who? His morality, or lackthereof, was removed by a being. What else could explain the situation?
"Oho, you have the ...
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