01-19-2017, 02:28 AM
Sean's never been able to pick up on Diana's manipulation, at least not in the short time it took for him to kill Conrad. Adalind's quickly figured it out while his confusion seems to last a lot longer even after he snaps out of it. Maybe if given time he might realise when his actions aren't his ownin any situation, especially if they contradict what he'd do in a similar situation hut this might be more difficult if the manipulation lines up with his own thinking. What happened with Adalind stems from him always being attracted to her even though he doesn't love her at all. If Adalind decided she wanted him again, he'd never turn her down.
With Conrad/Meisner, he could have shot Conrad but he chose not to. Killing Meisner is both selfish and an act of mercy. He was past the point of return with Conrad to turn back to the right side but he also didn't want to see a "friend" suffer as they died. Which is odd since if he was a true friend, he'd choose to save said friend. I think Sean's Zauberbiest nature was more in control than his human side in that moment. And it's probably because of his human side that he's experiencing these guilty conscience visions, meaning he's not completely lost to the dark side just yet.
With Conrad/Meisner, he could have shot Conrad but he chose not to. Killing Meisner is both selfish and an act of mercy. He was past the point of return with Conrad to turn back to the right side but he also didn't want to see a "friend" suffer as they died. Which is odd since if he was a true friend, he'd choose to save said friend. I think Sean's Zauberbiest nature was more in control than his human side in that moment. And it's probably because of his human side that he's experiencing these guilty conscience visions, meaning he's not completely lost to the dark side just yet.