I think Heiner's feelings towards Annette was something similar to cult-like reverence. He's simultaneously processing two extreme emotions under extreme circumstances: "I need to live so I can see her." and "I'm enduring this hell because of her."
When everything in life is centered around something external, it will feel unstable, volatile, and uncontrollable. I think the story did well in reflecting that in both Heiner and Annette!
There's just something euphoric about seeing living trash get their asses handed to them through karma.
Revenge thrillers with batshit craycray yet calculative protagonists are just //chefs kiss// who cares if they end up like their victims when they got what they came for anywayss
I think Heiner's feelings towards Annette was something similar to cult-like reverence. He's simultaneously processing two extreme emotions under extreme circumstances: "I need to live so I can see her." and "I'm enduring this hell because of her."
When everything in life is centered around something external, it will feel unstable, volatile, and uncontrollable. I think the story did well in reflecting that in both Heiner and Annette!