12-28-2017, 07:55 PM
In another tread the ever bonny irukandji queries thusly:
He has to. There are only two characters that seem innately reflective on the show, Monroe and Renard. Of the two, Monroe seems to be the only one to truly look beyond his own circumstances. Most assuredly he has to know he has innately endangered his children's well being and the family. Consider at any time, Monroe can now be implicated in a series of murders. Realistically he has to live everyday knowing one of the rogue cops could expose him, blackmail him, whatever. Or simply some honest cop could come across a clue (however honest cops seem rare in Portland). In addition someone could opt for revenge and use him, Rosalee, or their children to get at Nick or simply as revenge against Monroe. He also is likely an international treasured artifact thief. My guess is, that little incident most assuredly will eventually be traced back to him thus robbing him of his livelihood.
Regrets you ask, I bet over time Monroe grows to rue the day he met Nick Burkhardt.
Quote:Do you ever wonder if Monroe has any regrets about sliding back into the wesen world?
He has to. There are only two characters that seem innately reflective on the show, Monroe and Renard. Of the two, Monroe seems to be the only one to truly look beyond his own circumstances. Most assuredly he has to know he has innately endangered his children's well being and the family. Consider at any time, Monroe can now be implicated in a series of murders. Realistically he has to live everyday knowing one of the rogue cops could expose him, blackmail him, whatever. Or simply some honest cop could come across a clue (however honest cops seem rare in Portland). In addition someone could opt for revenge and use him, Rosalee, or their children to get at Nick or simply as revenge against Monroe. He also is likely an international treasured artifact thief. My guess is, that little incident most assuredly will eventually be traced back to him thus robbing him of his livelihood.
Regrets you ask, I bet over time Monroe grows to rue the day he met Nick Burkhardt.
Oxford commas are so totally rad!.