Chapter 11: The Creature's Lament
Standing over Victor's frozen body, the creature finally expressed his profound inner turmoil. He explained how his inherent goodness had been corrupted by perpetual rejection, isolation, and societal prejudice. His initial capacity for compassion and understanding had been systematically destroyed by humanity's unrelenting cruelty.
The creature acknowledged his terrible actions, yet maintained that they were the inevitable result of being denied any possibility of love, acceptance, or meaningful connection with intelligent beings. His confession revealed the complexity of his character—neither purely evil nor purely good, but rather a being twisted by the circumstances of his existence.
This moment of confession provided the creature's only opportunity for catharsis, as he finally expressed the depth of his suffering to his dead creator.